Georgia O’Keeffe (1887–1986) has become one of America’s
best-known artists. This book, which accompanies an exhibition
of the same name, centers on O’Keeffe’s efforts to
ensure proper conservation of the fragile surfaces of her paintings
of bones, flowers, and landscapes. Based on previously unpublished
correspondence between O’Keeffe and distinguished conservator
Caroline Keck, this catalogue from the Mississippi Museum of Art
presents entirely new information about the relationship between
O’Keeffe’s aesthetic vision and her distinctive handling
of paint and pastel.
O’Keeffe’s use of color has long
been regarded as a source of the great emotional power that animates
her abstract
renderings of natural forms. But little was known about her techniques,
because she surrounded her studio practices with a wall of secrecy.
Her correspondence with Keck reveals that she was surprisingly
traditional, sometimes making her own color chips and pastel sticks
and even at times grinding her own pigments.
The essays in Georgia
O’Keeffe: Color and Conservation consider
the artist’s enduring love of the very substance of color.
Through close analysis of paintings and pastels with a continuous
history of conservation, the essays document O’Keeffe’s
and Keck’s painstaking efforts to restore damaged art to
its original state. The discussion and accompanying illustrations
will give readers an expanded understanding of the subtle beauty
and diversity of O’Keeffe’s painting methods. |
|
|
René Paul
Barilleaux is Curator of Art after 1945 at the McNay Art Museum
in San Antonio, Texas, and former Director for Programs at the
Mississippi Museum of Art. In 2003, he curated Passionate Observer:
Photographs by Eudora Welty at the National Museum of Women in
the Arts in Washington, D.C.
Sarah
Whitaker Peters, who earned her master's in art history from
Columbia University and her doctorate from the City University
of New York Graduate Center, lives in New York and Jackson Hole,
Wyoming. She has contributed essays on O'Keeffe to several journals
and books, including Women Artists 1550-1950, by Linda Nochlin
and Ann Sutherland Harris, and most recently, to Portraits of
American Women.
|
|
|