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1887
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November 15: Georgia Totto OKeeffe
born to Francis Calyxtus OKeeffe and Ida Totto OKeeffe
at family dairy farm, near Sun Prairie, Wisconsin, the first girl
and the second of seven children, including Francis Calyxtus (1885-1959),
Ida Ten Eyck (1889-1961), Anita Natalie (1891-1985), Alexius Wyckoff
(1892-1930), Catherine Blanche (1895-1987), and Claudia Ruth (1899-1984). |
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18921900
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Attends Town Hall School and, along with
sisters Ida and Anita, receives art lessons at home; furthers art
instruction with Sarah Mann, a local watercolorist. |
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19011902
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Attends Sacred Heart Academy in Madison,
Wisconsin, for first year of high school (as boarder); receives art
instruction from Sister Angelique. |
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1902
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Fall: OKeeffe family moves
to Williamsburg, Virginia. |
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1902-1903
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As sophomore, attends Madison High School;
lives with her aunt, Leonore (Lola) Totto.
June 1903: joins family in Williamsburg. |
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19031905
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Fall 1903: attends Chatham (Virginia)
Episcopal Institute, as boarder.
June 1905: graduates. Elizabeth May Willis, Chathams
principal and art instructor, recognizes and encourages OKeeffes
interest in art. In senior year OKeeffe serves as art editor
of the school yearbook Mortar Board. |
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1905-1906
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Fall 1905: attends School of The
Art Institute of Chicago and studies with John Vanderpoel; lives with
uncle and aunt, Charles and Alletta Totto.
Summer 1906: with family in Williamsburg, recovering from lingering
illness; remains there through the next summer. |
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1907-1908
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Fall-spring: attends Art Students
League, New York; studies with William Merritt Chase, F. Luis Mora,
and Kenyon Cox; rooms with Florence Cooney.
January 1908: attends exhibition of works on paper by Auguste Rodin
at The Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession (291), operated by
Alfred Stieglitz; sits for portrait by fellow student Eugene Speicher.
April 1908: possibly sees exhibition of works by Henri Matisse
at 291.
June 1908: awarded Leagues 1907-8 Still Life Scholarship.
Summer 1908: as scholarship winner, attends Leagues Outdoor
School at Lake George, New York. |
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1908-1911
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Fall 1908: moves to Chicago to
work as free-lance commercial artist, again living with uncle and
aunt, the Tottos. Around 1910: becomes ill with measles and moves
to Charlottesville, Virginia, to live with mother, sisters, and brothers,
who move there from Williamsburg sometime in 1909.
Fall 1911: temporarily takes over Miss Williss teaching
schedule at Chatham Episcopal Institute, who indicates in 1912 letter,
Miss OKeeffe had charge of my Art Department last fall. |
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1912
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Summer: attends drawing class at
University of Virginia, Charlottesville, taught by Alon Bement, of
Teachers College, Columbia University, who introduces her to ideas
of his mentor, artist-teacher Arthur Wesley Dow, head of Art Department
at Teachers College.
August: moves to Amarillo, Texas, as supervisor of drawing
and penmanship in public schools; holds position through spring 1914. |
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1913
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Summer: returns to Charlottesville
to work as Bements assistant at University of Virginia (and
continues to teach there summers through 1916). |
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1914-1915
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Meets Arthur Macmahon, a political science
professor from Columbia University, who is teaching summer school
at University of Virginia and with whom she becomes close friends.
Fall 1914: enrolls at Teachers College, Columbia University.
December 1914-March 1915: attends exhibitions of works by Georges
Braque, John Marin, and Pablo Picasso at 291.
Fall 1915: moves to Columbia, South Carolina, to teach art
at Columbia College.
October 1915: makes decision to chart new direction for her
art and produces seminal series of charcoal abstractions, some of
which she sends to her friend Anita Pollitzer in New York during the
period October-December. |
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1916
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January: Pollitzer takes group
of OKeeffes charcoal drawings to Stieglitz at 291 on New
Years Day. OKeeffe sends Pollitzer additional work and
begins a thirty-year correspondence with Stieglitz, which is particularly
intense in 1916-18.
March: returns to Teachers College to attend the Dow course
in methods specified by West Texas State Normal College, Canyon, as
prerequisite to assuming position there.
May 1: mother dies in Charlottesville; attends funeral following
day.
May 23: Stieglitz opens group show at 291 that includes some
of OKeeffes charcoal drawings.
June: leaves New York for Virginia to teach with Bement.
Late August: moves to Texas to begin teaching job. Stieglitz
includes OKeeffe work in an informal group show at 291. |
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1917
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April 3: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe, first one-person show of her work, at 291;
August: vacations in and around Ward, Colorado, with sister
Claudia. On way back to Texas, stops in Santa Fe for first time and
is immediately impressed by New Mexicos vast skies and vistas
and the stark beauty of its landscape forms.
Early winter: becomes ill. |
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1918
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Late February: granted leave of
absence from teaching responsibilities and, on February 21, moves
first to San Antonio and later, in March, to a farm in Waring, Texas.
Relocating rejuvenates OKeeffe.
May: Stieglitz sends Strand to Texas to discover if OKeeffe
would consider moving to New York.
June 10: OKeeffe and Strand arrive in New York, and OKeeffe
moves into studio apartment at 114 East 59th Street that Stieglitzs
niece, Elizabeth, is not using.
July 8: Stieglitz leaves Emmeline Obermeyer Stieglitz, his
wife since 1893, to live with OKeeffe. That month, he begins
photographing OKeeffe in earnest, and she resigns from West
Texas State, accepting Stieglitzs offer to underwrite a year
of painting.
November 11: OKeeffes father dies in Petersburg,
Virginia. |
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1921
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February 7: Stieglitz retrospective
exhibition opens at The Anderson Galleries (145 prints, 1886-1921);
several nudes within the 45 photographs of OKeeffe create sensation
with public and critics. |
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1923
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January 29: Stieglitz opens Alfred
Stieglitz Presents One Hundred Pictures: Oils, Water-colors, Pastels,
Drawings, by Georgia OKeeffe, American, an exhibition of
over 100 works at The Anderson Galleries. He organizes exhibitions
of her work annually until his death in 1946. |
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1924
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March: Stieglitz opens Alfred
Stieglitz Presents Fifty-One Recent Pictures: Oils, Water-colors,
Pastels, Drawings, by Georgia OKeeffe, American, at The
Anderson Galleries and, simultaneously, opens an exhibition of 61
of his photographs.
September 9: Stieglitzs divorce from wife finalized.
November: OKeeffe and Stieglitz move to apartment at
35 East 58th Street and, on December 11, are married in Cliffside
Park, New Jersey. |
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1925
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March: Stieglitz opens Alfred
Stieglitz Presents Seven Americans: 159 Paintings, Photographs &
Things, Recent & Never Before Publicly Shown, by Arthur G. Dove,
Marsden Hartley, John Marin, Charles Demuth, Paul Strand, Georgia
OKeeffe, Alfred Stieglitz at The Anderson Galleries, in
which OKeeffes large-format paintings of flowers are first
exhibited.
Mid-November: OKeeffe and Stieglitz move to the Shelton
Hotel, on Lexington Avenue between 48th and 49th, living first on
12th floor and, subsequently, on other floors until 1936, when they
move to 405 East 54th Street. |
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1926
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February: Stieglitz opens Fifty
Recent Paintings, by Georgia OKeeffe, at The Intimate Gallery,
which includes first of many depictions of New York architecture completed
between 1925 and 1932. |
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1927
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January: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: Paintings, 1926, at The Intimate Gallery.
April: OKeeffe at Lake George.
June: first retrospective, Paintings by Georgia OKeeffe,
opens at The Brooklyn Museum. |
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1928
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January: Stieglitz opens OKeeffe
Exhibition, at The Intimate Gallery.
April 21: he announces sale of six OKeeffe calla lily
paintings for $25,000. |
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1929
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February 4-March 17: Stieglitz
opens Georgia OKeeffe: Paintings, 1928, at The Intimate
Gallery.
April 27: OKeeffe and artist Rebecca Strand (wife of
photographer Paul Strand) leave for Santa Fe, New Mexico; after arrival,
move to Taos as guests of arts supporter-writer
Mabel Dodge Luhan, who provides OKeeffe a studio.
December 13: Paintings by 19 Living Americans, with
five works by OKeeffe, opens at the Museum of Modern Art.
December 15: Stieglitz opens final gallery, An American Place,
in Room 1710, 509 Madison Avenue, with Marin exhibition. |
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1930
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February: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: 27 New Paintings, New Mexico, New York, Lake George,
Etc., at An American Place, which includes earliest paintings
of New Mexico crosses and of San Francisco de Assís Church
in Ranchos de Taos.
Late April: OKeeffe to New Mexico.
June-September: OKeeffe guest of Luhans in Taos. |
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1931
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December 27: Stieglitz opens
Georgia OKeeffe: 33 New Paintings (New Mexico) at An American
Place, the first exhibition with paintings of bones. |
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1932
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April: OKeeffe accepts $1500
commission to paint mural for powder room in Radio City Music Hall,
scheduled to open at end of year.
June and August: travels to Canada and paints barns, crosses,
and the sea.
October: faced with technical and other difficulties, abandons
Radio City Music Hall commission and stops painting entirely. |
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1933
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January: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: PaintingsNew & Some Old, at An American
Place. OKeeffe becomes ill and moves to New York apartment of
sister Anita Young.
February: admitted to Doctors Hospital, suffering from
psychoneurosis. From March through April: recuperates in Bermuda.
In October, is recovered enough to begin drawing at Lake George. |
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1934
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January: begins painting after
13-month hiatus, and on January 29, Stieglitz opens Georgia OKeeffe
at An American Place, 44 Selected Paintings 1915-1927.
March-April: OKeeffe again travels to Bermuda.
June: travels to New Mexico.
August: first visit to Ghost Ranch, a dude ranch north of Abiquiu.
Stunning landscape configurations around Ghost Ranch provide new inspiration
for OKeeffes work. |
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1935
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January: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: Exhibition of Paintings (1919-1934), at An American
Place.
July: travels to New Mexico, and until August 2, stays at Garlands
ranch, then moves to room at Ghost Ranch. |
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1936
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January: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: Exhibition of Recent Paintings, 1935, at An American
Place.
April: OKeeffe and Stieglitz move from Shelton Hotel
to penthouse apartment at 405 East 54th Street.
June: OKeeffe travels to New Mexico; first summer living
in the house at Ghost Ranch she buys in 1940, Rancho de los Burros.
July- Fall: receives $10,000 commission from Elizabeth Arden
to make large painting for new exercise salon in New York. |
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1937
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February: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: New Paintings, An American Place, New York, N.Y.
July: OKeeffe to New Mexico.
December: Stieglitz opens Georgia OKeeffe: The 14th
Annual Exhibition of Paintings With Some Recent OKeeffe Letters,
at An American Place. |
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1938
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May: OKeeffe travels to Williamsburg,
Virginia, to receive honorary degree from College of William and Mary,
the first of many she would receive during her lifetime.
Summer: OKeeffe receives commission from advertising
agency N. W. Ayer to travel to Hawaii to produce paintings for a Dole
Company promotional campaign.
August: OKeeffe to New Mexico. |
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1939
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January: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: Exhibition of Oils And Pastels, at An American
Place.
Late January-April: OKeeffe travels to Hawaii. |
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1940
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February: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: Exhibition of Oils and Pastels, at An American
Place.
August: OKeeffe to New Mexico. |
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1941
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January: Stieglitz opens Exhibition
of Georgia OKeeffe, at An American Place.
May: OKeeffe to New Mexico. |
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1942
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February: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: Exhibition of Recent Paintings, 1941, at An American
Place.
June: OKeeffe to New Mexico.
December: OKeeffe moves with Stieglitz to 59 East 54th
Street, her last New York address. |
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1943
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January: OKeeffe in Chicago
to install and attend events related to opening of retrospective,
Georgia OKeeffe, at the Art Institute of Chicago.
March: Stieglitz opens Georgia OKeeffe: Paintings-1942-1943,
at An American Place.
April: OKeeffe to New Mexico. |
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1944
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January: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: Paintings1943, at An American Place.
April: OKeeffe to New Mexico. |
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1945
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January: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe: Paintings, 1944, at An American Place.
May: OKeeffe to New Mexico.
December: purchases Abiquiu property from Catholic Archdiocese
of Santa Fe. |
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1946
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February: Stieglitz opens Georgia
OKeeffe, at An American Place. OKeeffe begins organizing
retrospective, Georgia OKeeffe, to open at The Museum
of Modern Art in May.
July 13: Stieglitz dies.
Late September: OKeeffe returns to New Mexico. |
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1947
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January through early summer: OKeeffe
in New York (where she primarily lives until 1949), working to settle
the Stieglitz Estate, which results in the distribution of his art
collection to numerous public institutions. |
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1949
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June: leaves New York to live permanently
in New Mexico, where she habitually spends winter and spring in Abiquiu
and summer and fall at Ghost Ranch. |
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1950
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July: OKeeffe begins organizing
Georgia OKeeffe: Paintings 1946-1950, to open at An American
Place in October. Edith Halpert, owner of The Downtown Gallery, becomes
OKeeffes exclusive agent. |
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1951
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February-March: OKeeffe travels
to Mexico for six weeks with Spud Johnson, Elliott Porter, and Porters
wife, Aline. Trip includes drive to Yucatán with Rose and Miguel
Covarrubias and meets Diego Rivera and Frieda Kahlo. |
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1959
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Brother Francis dies.
January-April: travels via San Francisco and Honolulu to Southeast
Asia, the Far East, India, the Middle East, and Italy. |
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1960
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July: OKeeffe helps organize
Georgia OKeeffe: Forty Years of Her Art, the retrospective
that opens in October at the Worcester (Mass.) Art Museum.
Late October-November: OKeeffe makes second trip to Asia. |
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1961
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Sister Ida dies.
Spring: helps organize and install what will be her last exhibition
at The Downtown Gallery, Georgia OKeeffe: Recent Paintings
and Drawings, which opens in early April. |
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1963
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Doris Bry becomes OKeeffes
exclusive agent. |
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1965
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Summer: in garage at Ghost Ranch
paints her largest clouds picture. |
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1966
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March: attends opening of retrospective,
Georgia OKeeffe: An Exhibition of the Work of the Artist
from 1915 to 1966, at the Amon Carter Museum of Western Art, Fort
Worth. |
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1970
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Early October: installs retrospective,
Georgia OKeeffe, at the Whitney Museum of American Art. |
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1971
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Early in year: loses central vision;
retains only peripheral sight. |
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1972
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During year, completes last unassisted
oil painting, though continues to work in oil with assistance until
1977. (Works unassisted in watercolor and charcoal until 1978 and
in graphite until 1984.) |
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1973
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November: meets potter-sculptor Juan Hamilton,
who becomes her assistant and, later, her close friend and representative.
(Among other things, Hamilton is a travelling companion and facilitator,
making possible completion of several projects, including Viking Press
publication Georgia OKeeffe [1976] and Perry Miller Adato
video Georgia OKeeffe [1977]). |
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1977
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January: receives Medal of Freedom from
President Gerald Ford. |
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1984
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March: OKeeffe moves, with Hamilton
and family, to large house in Santa Fe, Sol y Sombra, to be nearer
medical facilities. |
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1985
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Sister Anita Young dies. Awarded National
Medal of Arts by President Ronald Reagan. |
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1986
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March 6: OKeeffe dies at St. Vincents
Hospital, Santa Fe. |