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                                                                                                                                          Robert Henri & Ireland... The Special Exhibition Arrives September 2011 08/04/2011
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                                                                                                                                          Why is the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum presenting an exhibition of portraits by Robert Henri (1865–1929) that he completed while in Ireland? 

                                                                                                                                          As stated in the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum’s mission: “The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum is dedicated to perpetuating the artistic legacy of Georgia O’Keeffe and to the study and interpretation of American Modernism (late nineteenth century to the present).” Therefore, we often present exhibitions by contemporaries of Georgia O’Keeffe (1887–1986) that shed light on her role and position in the history of American Modernism. 

                                                                                                                                          When O’Keeffe attended the Art Students League in New York City from 1907 to 1908, Henri was teaching there. Although she never took his courses, she was aware of his approach to imagemaking, called imitative realism, which had been fundamental to the curriculum in art schools since their founding. Imitative realism involved transforming a two-dimensional surface into a painted illusion of a three-dimensional world filled with recognizable forms. This was also the approach of William Merritt Chase, another teacher at the Art Students League, whose courses O’Keeffe did take. O’Keeffe quickly mastered imitative realism and in 1908 won the League’s William Merritt Chase still-life prize. 

                                                                                                                                          Henri was the leader of the Ashcan School of American painters—artists whose work was traditional in its reliance on imitative realism but innovative in its content. These painters were the first to make working-class people and ordinary events the subject of their work. Other Ashcan School artists included William Glackens (1870–1938), George Luks (1867–1933), Everett Shinn (1876–1953), and John French Sloan (1871–1951).

                                                                                                                                          Like Henri and Chase, O’Keeffe was an excellent portrait artist—one of her lesser-known abilities as she seldom made portraits after her professional career began in 1916. A selection of portraits she completed before 1916 are included in the Robert Henri & Ireland exhibition. They relate specifically to the kind of imagery Henri produced throughout his career and especially during his two trips to Ireland (1913 and 1928), where he completed some of his most distinctive portraits.

                                                                                                                                          O’Keeffe began to question the value of imitative realism after winning the Chase prize, and then abandoned artmaking until 1912, when she learned through one of her colleagues about the then-revolutionary ideas of American artist and educator Arthur Wesley Dow (1857–1922), head of the art department at Teachers College, Columbia University. Dow had rejected imitative realism, believing that artists should make their own ideas and feelings the subject of their work. His approach appealed greatly to O’Keeffe and shaped all of her subsequent work. But not even his influence can explain O’Keeffe’s remarkable turn to abstraction in 1915, when she produced some of the most innovative work in American art of that period. Several examples of her early abstractions are included in the Robert Henri & Ireland exhibition as well.

                                                                                                                                          At first, Henri and O’Keeffe approached imagemaking in a similar manner, but the work that launched O’Keeffe’s career in the 1910s was abstract and modernist, and anything but a furthering of the imitative realism to which Henri remained committed. Because abstraction informed all of O’Keeffe’s work, even when she painted recognizable forms, she became known as one of America’s leading modernist artists. Yet she never lost her ability to capture a likeness, and several of her portraits from the 1930s and ’40s have been included in this exhibition along with other examples from the 1910s through the ’60s in order to demonstrate the fundamental differences between the works of these two twentieth-century artists. 

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                                                                                                                                          Acquisition 07/08/2011
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                                                                                                                                          A painting by Rebecca Salsbury (Strand) James has been given to the Museum: Peace, 1937, reverse painting on glass, 8 x 10 inches. O’Keeffe met and became friends with James in New York in the 1920s, when James was married to photographer Paul Strand. He was among the handful of artists supported by Alfred Stieglitz, America’s leading advocate of modern art, an internationally known photographer, and O’Keeffe’s husband and agent. O’Keeffe traveled by train with James to New Mexico when she first began painting there in 1929, and the two remained lifelong friends.

                                                                                                                                          This marvelous example of James’s work was given to the Museum by Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Woods of Chicago and we are extremely grateful to them for this wonderful addition to our collection. We hope that others will join their efforts to expand our collection by making gifts to the Museum of works by O’Keeffe and her contemporaries. 
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                                                                                                                                          Sharing Summer 06/24/2011
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                                                                                                                                          If two heads are better than one, then surely this summer’s O’Keeffe Museum collaborations with premier creative organizations will build an array of exciting, not-to-miss activities. For families and young adults, from the Read­ers’ Club to painting workshops, there are many opportunities to expand your under­standing of the Museum’s exhibitions, have fun, and engage with art more deeply. To learn about all of the Museum’s education programs that are happening this summer, go online at okeeffemuseum.org/learn.

                                                                                                                                          The Museum inaugurates a partnership with the Santa Fe School of Cooking by presenting Georgia O’Keeffe and the Art of Eating Well on Monday, June 20, Monday, July 18, and Friday, July 29, from 10 am to 1 pm. The program offers the opportunity to discover and explore some of Georgia O’Keeffe’s ideas about food and cooking. Chef Michelle Roetzer will guide attendees through a number of the recipes featured in the book A Painter’s Kitchen: Recipes from the Kitchen of Georgia O’Keeffe, by Margaret Wood. O’Keeffe had a unique perspective on food for her time, appreciating simple foods that were in season and that were grown and handled with care. Ms. Wood, O’Keeffe’s assistant and companion for five years, will also be on hand to share personal stories as well as insights into O’Keeffe’s artful way of liv­ing and her views on food. This class will illuminate the recipes in context, to create the spirit of dining with Georgia O’Keeffe. The demonstration-style class includes recipes and a full meal. To register for the class call the Santa Fe School of Cooking at 505.983.4511 or go online at santafeschoolofcooking.com.

                                                                                                                                          Also new for this summer, the Museum teams with the Santa Fe Desert Chorale to present several talks by Robert Kyr, the Chorale’s new Composer-in-Residence, on the text of Walt Whitman that influenced the creation of his new work to be performed during the 2011 summer season, which runs from July 7 to August 12. Join us at the Museum on Monday, July 11, or Wednesday, July 20, from 8:30 to 10 am for Genesis of a New Work: Tides of Peace. Music director Joshua Haberman will join Kyr on Monday, July 18, and Wednesday, July 27, to present Walt Whitman, Robert Kyr, and the Music of War and Peace. Both lectures are free to Museum members and Business Partners and open to the public with the price of Museum admission. Reservations are suggested: call 505.946.1039 or go online at okeeffemu­seum.org.

                                                                                                                                          The Santa Fe Opera and the Museum will offer Shared Inspiration/Personal Interpretation on Tuesday, July 12, from 9 am to noon and 6:30 pm to midnight. This co-presented event, an annual favorite, highlights a theme found in one of the Museum’s exhibitions and one of the Opera’s productions. Throughout history artists have drawn ideas from literary, visual, and performance works and recast them through the lens of their chosen medium. You can explore this rich interaction as we look at the Museum’s exhibition Shared Intelligence: American Painting and the Photo­graph. Opera lecturer Karen Klett and art historian Sharyn Udall will discuss historic references, and digital media artist Deborah Fort will lead a workshop that uses family photographs as avenues for participants to develop their own written or visual work. The program continues in the evening at the Florence Dapples cantina, where there will be dinner and a dialogue with GRONK, the artist and set designer for Vivaldi’s Griselda. GRONK will talk about his and director Peter Sellars’s inspiration for and interpretation of this Santa Fe Opera production. The evening concludes with a dress rehearsal of Griselda. Reserve your space by July 8 to participate in this rich experience: call 505.946.1039 or go to okeeffemuseum.org.

                                                                                                                                          Bostick & Sullivan, the world’s leading authority on handcrafted alternative photographic processes, is offering The Handmade Photograph–Platinum/Palladium Workshop on Thursday, August 11, from 9 am to 5 pm. After viewing the works of artists in the Shared Intelligence exhibi­tion (who favor the rich tones of the platinum print for their photographs), participants will head to the Bostick & Sullivan studios, where they will learn the basic techniques for making photographs per the historic nineteenth-century platinum/palladium process. Bring a large-format negative, up to 8 x 10 in size, or a digital file of 360 PPI and 16 bits for the desired negative dimensions; all printing materials will be provided. Class size is very limited, so reserve your space by August 8 and try your hand with this historic printing technique. For more information, go to bostick-sullivan.com.

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                                                                                                                                          See You at the Symposium! 05/25/2011
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                                                                                                                                          Symposium: Challenging 1945
                                                                                                                                          July 14-16, 2011
                                                                                                                                          http://www.okeeffemuseum.org/symposium.html

                                                                                                                                          Recent scholarship has increasingly called into question the use of 1945 as a marker to separate pre-World War II developments in American art from those occurring later. This division has characterized art developments of the century in terms of rupture and division, often implying that the art made before 1945 is inferior to the art that came after. Yet many artists who began their careers in the early twentieth century lived well into its second half and produced outstanding work both before and after this dividing point. Moreover, not only did the work of many artists overlap this artificially imposed marker, their works borrowed from and reacted to earlier developments in American art. This is the subject of Challenging 1945: Exploring Continuities in American Art, 1890s to the Present, the symposium sponsored by the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Research Center July 14–16 in celebration of the Center’s 10-year anniversary. Over the course of two and a half days, distinguished artists and art historians will assess this period from the perspective of its continuities and interdependencies in order to further expand our understanding of its complex, nuanced, and pluralistic history.

                                                                                                                                          American art historian William Agee will present the keynote address Thursday night at the Hilton Hotel, followed by a reception. The symposium sessions begin on Friday morning and run through Saturday morning, and each session will be followed by a question-and-answer period. Presenters include Whitney Chadwick, Huey Copeland, Thomas Crow, Erika Doss, Patricia Hills, Michael Leja, Michael Loble, Richard Meyer, Elizabeth Turner, Terry Smith, and Robert Storr. Saturday’s session includes a panel discussion with art historian and artist Jonathan Weinberg, and artists Robert Bechtle, Audrey Flack, and Barkley Hendricks.

                                                                                                                                          During the symposium, works by Bechtle, Flack, and Hendricks will be on view at the Museum in the exhibition Shared Intelligence: American Painting and the Photograph, whose co-curators are myself and independent scholar and artist Jonathan Weinberg. Since the invention of photography in the late 1830s, tensions have existed between the art of painting and the art of photography and one has often been assessed as more valuable or more important than the other. Shared Intelligence expresses a different point of view: in bringing together photographs and paintings by artists for whom the two mediums were essential to their practices, it explores the fraught relationships between painting and photography in terms of how they nourish and invigorate each other to reveal both continuities and interdependencies.

                                                                                                                                          The Shared Intelligence exhibition developed out of ideas that were presented at the July 2006 Research Center symposium Painting and Photography in American Art: Sources, Ideas, and Influences, 1890s to the Present. Several speaker presentations from that symposium have been published in the Shared Intelligence exhibition catalogue (along with essays by other prominent historians of art and photography). The exhibition catalogue was published by the University of California Press, Berkeley, 2011.

                                                                                                                                          The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Research Center is the only museum-related research facility in the world devoted to the study of American Modernism (late-nineteenth century to the present). It is equally unique in that its mission parallels that of exhibitions organized or sponsored by the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum: to shed new light on the history of American modern art as well as O’Keeffe’s contribution to it.

                                                                                                                                          Every five years the Research Center sponsors a symposium in Santa Fe that considers an issue of overarching concern to historians of American art. It has also realized three symposia (in 2001, 2003, and 2005) on the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum website, all of which were subsequently pub­lished as books. Each online symposium was moderated by noted art historian Maurice Berger.

                                                                                                                                          Every year the Research Center’s competitive scholarship program supports the work of six scholars and/or museum professionals whose projects explore subjects in American Modernism in the fields of art history, architecture and design, literature, music, and photography. We have wel­comed many dozens of individuals to the Research Center, some of whom have organized exhibi­tions at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum. Moreover, the Research Center sponsors public lectures, conferences, and publications, and houses a highly specialized research library and an extensive archival collection related to Georgia O’Keeffe and her contemporaries.

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