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Georgia O'Keeffe: Abstraction @ The Phillips Collection

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Early Abstraction, 1915, Charcoal on paper, 24 x 18 5/8 in., Milwaukee Art Museum, Gift of Jane Bradley Pettit Foundation and The Georgia O’Keeffe Foundation, M1997.189, (CR 50), Photography by Malcolm Varon, © Milwaukee Art Museum
As one of the few American women painters of the 20th century to receive notoriety, Georgia O'Keeffe's body of work is characterized as modern, abstract, representational, feminist and highly sexual. Interpretation of her abstract flowers, skeletal bones and landscapes have been debated throughout her life with O'Keeffe largely rejecting the later characteristics and interpretations she didn't like.

Georgia O'Keeffe: Abstraction at The Phillips Collection contains all of the expected paintings of flowers and landscapes, with emphasis on her earlier abstractions, and also offers a glimpse into the personal life of the artist. Classics such as her Music, Pink and Blue series and Jack in the Pulpit works are exemplary of the style O'Keeffe became known for and embattled in feminine analysis. The familiar fluid lines and often soft color palette adorn the walls. They are familiar markers of her life's work.

It's inevitable that with any showing of her work, along with Freudian judgment, mention has to be made of Alfred Stieglitz and their relationship. This exhibit is no different, offering 14 photographic portraits of O'Keeffe by Stieglitz. The addition of these photographs gives a better grasp of O'Keeffe as a persona and artist; perhaps only through the eyes of Stieglitz and his sexual readings of her work. But the most compelling additions here, that claim otherwise, are a selection of letters to and from O'Keeffe and Stieglitz.

In one, O'Keeffe asks Stieglitz what he thought of her drawings. "...I make them - just to express myself - things I feel and want to say - haven't words for..." Stieglitz responds, "It is impossible for me to put into words what I saw and felt in your drawings..."

Stieglitz sentiment is apt, as the exhibit opens with these powerful charcoal drawings from early in her career. They show the same spiral and curve abstractions as her paintings and produce the same visual impact, but they are strong in black and white, yet as fragile as the paper they were created on.

Early Abstraction whisks your attention up and into the depths of a black circle. For a fairly messy medium, O'Keeffe's lines here are controlled but still maintain an energetic feel and while this early work might not look typical of the artist's style, the organic lines and spiral shape are seen throughout her career. An argument can be made that the dark depth of this piece is the beginning of her feminist work and open to such interpretation, but it is in strong visual contrast to her later paintings that are more easily left to that judgment.

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Black Door with Red, 1954, Oil on canvas, 48 x 84 in., Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia, Bequest of Walter P. Chrysler, Jr. 89.63 (CR 1271), © Georgia O’Keeffe Museum/Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York
These early ideas flow easily into other mediums as the shapes continue into O'Keeffe's later paintings and the immediacy of the gestures and marks show themselves in her watercolors as well. The exhibit is laid out chronologically and these familiar shapes and images grow and mature as does her technique. In Series I - No. I you see heavy brush strokes laden with paint on the familiar curves and lines of the abstract flower and then in Dark Abstraction, another well known image, there are no brush strokes and the paint is smooth.

Her early abstractions and then representational oil paintings dominate the exhibit, but it is her later works done in the 1950s to 1970s that are a pleasant surprise. Here large geometric paintings painted in bright colors, again stand in contrast to her more organic pieces. Black Door with Red centers on a black square underlined by many pink rectangles and capped by fields of yellow. Only the subtle shifts of color relate these paintings to the rest of the collection.

Then there are the beautiful, minimal watercolors with large gestures seemingly done in one motion, like when drawing Asian characters. These strong shapes sit in the center of crisp paper, exuding peace. The colors and immediacy of the marks bring the exhibit full circle, paying homage to O'Keeffe's charcoal drawings and early watercolors.

Georgia O'Keeffe: Abstraction opens Saturday at The Phillips Collection and will be on view through May 9. The Museum is open Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursdays 10 a.m. to 8:30 p.m., and on Sundays from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Admission is $12.

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