O’Keeffe’s Desert Abstraction (Bear Lake) finds ‘forever home’ at New Mexico Museum of Art
- SANTA FE, New Mexico
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- December 04, 2017
In honor of the New Mexico Museum of Art Centennial year celebration, the Museum of New Mexico Foundation made permanent its long-term loan of the Georgia O’Keeffe’s Desert Abstraction (Bear Lake) to the Museum. With this move, the 1931 O’Keeffe piece becomes part of the Museum of Art’s permanent collection.
“After years of loaning Georgia O’Keeffe’s Desert Abstraction (Bear Lake) to the Museum of Art, we are grateful to the Museum of New Mexico Foundation for this making this exquisite piece a permanent gift of as we reopen for our Centennial year,” said Mary Kershaw, Museum of Art executive director. “Adding this s spectacular piece to our permanent collection is a privilege for the Museum of Art as we enter our second century. The painting is currently on display at the Governor's Residence."
Georgia O'Keeffe, born in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, was a major figure in the American Modernist art movement of the early 20th century. She challenged the boundaries of modern American artistic style, synthesizing abstraction and representation, transforming her subject matter into powerful iconic images. O’Keeffe enrolled at the Art Institute of Chicago and later, the Art Students League in New York City. She also worked with Arthur Wesley Dow whose influence strongly affected O'Keeffe's thinking about the process of making art. She exhibited with other pre-eminent artists in the Avant Garde art movement in New York City at Alfred Stieglitz’ 291 Gallery. She and Stieglitz married in 1924.
After a first visit to New Mexico in 1929, she was inspired by the landscape and forms of the region, which she visited and painted from 1929 on, buying a house at Ghost Ranch in 1940, her well-known hacienda in Abiquiu in 1945, and moving to New Mexico permanently in 1949 after Stieglitz’ death. O’Keeffe is chiefly known for paintings of flowers, rocks, shells, animal bones, and landscapes. Her paintings present crisply contoured forms co-existing with subtle tonal transitions of varying colors. Although she had lost much of her central eye vision, O'Keeffe continued to paint until only weeks before her death in Santa Fe, NM in 1986.
During Georgia O’Keeffe’s early years visiting New Mexico, she perfected the images of landscape painting that she would later become well known for, and she also experimented with more personal abstract views of her surroundings.
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