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O’Keeffe’s ankle didn’t have its full range of motion, and the antibiotics had her system out of whack. So, she missed the 10 km championships and spent the rest of the summer rehabbing.
May 21—Georgia O'Keeffe's Abiquiú home may have been her greatest work of art. Nestled in the desert landscape sits this unlikely mid-century — modern masterpiece. With a discerning eye for ...
O’Keeffe’s urban landscapes — as seen in “Georgia O’Keeffe: My New Yorks,” at the High Museum of Art through Feb. 16 — reveal a different side of this artist.
Before New Mexico, O’Keeffe made a home in Manhattan. The artist married photographer Alfred Stieglitz in 1924, and the two moved into an apartment on the 30th floor of Midtown’s Shelton Hotel.
Georgia O’Keeffe’s enchanting floral still life paintings are now a deeply ingrained part of American culture—so much so that they often eclipse her other colorful accomplishments.
O’Keeffe’s early period art was a revelation, too. “The hard angles and bold colors make sense to me, and interrupting her spirals with these jagged lines and bold colors,” Arnoult says.
The Georgia O'Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe broke ground this summer on a new $75 million campus to showcase the life and work of one of New Mexico's most influential late artists. The 54,000-square-foot ...
Before that, it was at O’Keeffe’s home and studio in Abiquiú and on the patio of the museum. It will be moved to a permanent spot once museum construction is finished in 2026.
Georgia O’Keeffe’s “Rust Red Hills” seen through Richard Hunt’s stainless steel “Becoming” at the Brauer Museum of Art on the Valparaiso University campus in Valparaiso, Indiana ...
Visitors to Santa Fe will continue to see Georgia O’Keeffe’s largest sculpture, thanks to a partnership between the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum and New Mexico Museum of Art.
O'Keeffe, who placed 11th in the 5K at the inaugural World Road Running Championships last fall in Riga, Latvia, qualified for the marathon Trials on the strength of a 69:34 half marathon in North ...
O’Keeffe, in spite of many illnesses, is still a great walker. She retains at forty-two the pale profile and blue-black hair, the sense of inner vitality that made her a famous beauty at the League.