2023-05-24 07:05:00
Georgia O’Keeffe (1887–1986) discovered New Mexico during the summer of 1929, in Taos. The American artist was then known for her paintings of flowers, in planes so tight that they seemed abstract, and her urban landscapes, in particular her unique representations of New York, where she had lived since 1918. Married for five years to the famous photographer and gallery owner Alfred Stieglitz, who left his wife for her, O’Keeffe is tired of their annual vacation in Lake George, in the latter’s family property, in northern New York. She returned the previous year to the lands of her native Wisconsin, and wishes to return to the American West.
She also knows that Stieglitz, who is 23 years older than her, cheats on her with an assistant 41 years her junior, and distances herself from this fickle spouse. What was supposed to be just a summer getaway turns out to be a founding experience that unleashes her creativity and changes the course of her art – and her existence. As she later explained: “As soon as I saw [le Nouveau-Mexique], it was my country. I had never seen anything like it before, but it suited me perfectly. The artist continued to come every year before settling there permanently for the last four decades of his life.
O’Keeffe spends his summers exploring the arid lands of northern Santa Fe, until her discovery of the Ghost Ranch in 1934. She first rented a cabin on this tourist-oriented ranch, 8,500 hectares of desert expanses owned by a wealthy nature-loving couple, Arthur and Phoebe Pack. She will buy them a piece of land and a house six years later!
“It’s my private mountain”
O’Keeffe found the views of the landscapes around him irresistible, and confided to his friend, the art critic Henry McBride in 1939: “All the earth colors of the painter’s palette are there”. She will represent the Cerro Pedernal, visible from the patio of her house, twenty-four times. The artist has the same passion for this ancient volcano as Cézanne did for Mont Sainte-Victoire – his ashes will be scattered there following his death. “It’s my private mountain,” she jokes, “God told me that if I painted it enough, it would be mine. O’Keeffe is also fascinated by the orange and yellow cliffs of the hills that rise behind her property, and they too will inspire many of her works.
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#Nature #refuge #Georgia #OKeeffe #Mexico