Showing posts with label Georgia O'Keeffe museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georgia O'Keeffe museum. Show all posts

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Exhibition of new photography acquisitions opens at the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum





Alfred Stieglitz, the avant-garde photographer and gallerist who later became her husband, created a series of more than 300 photographs of O’Keeffe during the course of his life.



SANTA FE, NM.- “New Photography Acquisitions” opened at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum March 27, 2015. This exhibition presents a selection of the newest additions to the Museum’s photography collection, many of which have never been published or exhibited at the Museum.

“We are especially proud to offer the first look at these recent acquisitions, including photographs that span O’Keeffe’s life from New York to New Mexico,” says Robert A. Kret, director of the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum. ”New Photography Acquisitions" includes many rarely seen images of O’Keeffe, one of the most photographed women of the 20th century, by some of the most well-known photographers of her day.”

“It is wonderful to see these insightful images,” says Carolyn Kastner, curator of the exhibition, “which include beautiful gelatin silver prints from Alfred Stieglitz, Philippe Halsman, and Ansel Adams, whose mastery of their media is a great complement to O’Keeffe’s paintings.”

Alfred Stieglitz, the avant-garde photographer and gallerist who later became her husband, created a series of more than 300 photographs of O’Keeffe during the course of his life, beginning in 1917. Several images from 1918, are included in the exhibition. One is famous for picturing O’Keeffe in the act of painting (one of only two known to do so), while others, which have not previously been published, frame intimate moments at Lake George, where the couple spent the summer and fall at the Stieglitz family home.

After Stieglitz’s death and O’Keeffe’s move to the remote village of Abiquiu in New Mexico, the artist continued to be a subject of interest to important photographers of the day, who journeyed to New Mexico and captured the artist in her environment, at home and in the landscape. Important portrait photographers such as Philippe Halsman, Yousuf Karsh, John Loengard, Arnold Newman and Tony Vaccaro followed her west. O’Keeffe friends Ansel Adams and Todd Webb, famous for their landscape photography, composed portraits of the artist–working the stark New Mexico scenery into the frame. Later pictures by Doris Bry, George Daniell, and Arnold Newman portray O’Keeffe in her New Mexico homes and in the surrounding landscape.

The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum’s photographic archive numbers more than 2,000 images. It forms a valuable record of the many ways that O’Keeffe presented herself to the camera in formal portraits as well as in candid snapshots with friends and family. Since the Museum was founded in 1997, its collection of photographs has grown steadily, primarily through gifts. The largest gift of more than 1000 photographs was presented to the Museum in 2006 by the Georgia O’Keeffe Foundation. That collection, assembled by the artist during her long life, became part of her estate after her death in 1986.

Similarly, the new acquisitions included in this exhibition, part of a collection purchased by the Museum in 2014, are unique because O’Keeffe selected the photographs for James Johnson Sweeney, the curator of her 1946 retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art. The acquisitions include a wide range of materials such as fine art prints, copy prints, negatives, contact sheets, and documentary photographs.

The Museum’s photographic archive also constitutes a collection of work by contemporaries of O’Keeffe who were recognized photographers in their own right as well as friends and visitors to New Mexico. The creative practice of O’Keeffe, her husband Alfred Stieglitz, and the photographers in the Museum’s collection span the 20th century and the rise of American Modernism. “New Photography Acquisitions” will be on view March 27 – September 26, 2015

RELATED: The Wall Street Journal: "Santa Fe is an unlikely center of photography"

Friday, July 26, 2013

The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum invites anyone enthusiastic about photography and art to enter the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Photography Contest


The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Announces 2013 Photography Competition and Landscape Theme

Amateur and professional photographers invited to submit original landscape-themed photos for second annual photography competition. Winners to receive photo publication, cash awards, and more.

Santa Fe, New Mexico (via PRWEB) July 26, 2013
 
"The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum is excited to invite photographers to submit their favorite images of landscapes,” said Robert A. Kret, Georgia O’Keeffe Museum director."
 
The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum is pleased to announce the second annual photography competition for 2013. To celebrate O’Keeffe’s enduring artistic legacy, this year’s theme honors landscapes, one of O’Keeffe’s most iconic and beloved subjects. Both amateur and professional photographers—located regionally, nationally, and internationally—are encouraged to submit their original images for a chance to win prizes and to be recognized for their talents.

The subject of her most iconic and important works, Georgia O’Keeffe depicted landscape configurations throughout her life, as if doing so put her in closer touch with the identity of a particular place. Of her time in Texas, O’Keeffe wrote to a friend saying, “I love the plains more than ever it seems – and the SKY – … you have never seen SKY – it is wonderful.” And of the beloved landscape of her future home in New Mexico, O’Keeffe explained, “When I got to New Mexico that was mine. As soon as I saw it, that was my country. I’d never seen anything like it before, but it fitted to me exactly. It’s something that’s in the air, it’s different. The sky is different, the wind is different.”

"The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum is excited to invite photographers to submit their favorite images of landscapes,” said Robert A. Kret, Georgia O’Keeffe Museum director. “It is an honor to reward their talent and creativity as a tribute to our namesake, Georgia O'Keeffe."

First, second and third place winners will be awarded in the adult category for entrants aged 21 years and older. The photography competition will also include two student competitions, one for students 18-21 years of age and a second competition for students under 18 years old. The Museum will also announce 20 honorable mentions. Photos may be submitted any time between today and the final entry deadline on Thursday, November 14, 2013, the eve of Georgia O’Keeffe’s birthday. Entrants are encouraged to submit their photos before October 15, 2013 to take advantage of reduced early entry fees.

The theme of the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum’s 2012 first annual photography competition was “flowers.” A total of 930 entrants from 17 countries submitted a grand total of 3,380 images. The winning photograph, “Dancing Tulips,” was submitted by Joanna Stoga of Wroclaw Poland; the remaining winners hailed from New Mexico.

JUDGES FOR THE 2013 PHOTOGRAPHY COMPETITION
Adult group judges: Jolene Hanson, director and curator of G2 Gallery; Eddie Soloway, photographer; and Amy Silverman, photo editor of Outside Magazine.
Student contest judge: Sarah Zurick, education and family programs manager of the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum.

WHAT THE WINNERS WILL RECEIVE:
All winning images will be published in the winter/spring issue of O’Keeffe Magazine and on the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum website beginning January 6, 2014 through May 1, 2014. Winners will receive the following awards and prizes:
1st Place Award

$500 cash-prize; a Santa Fe Photographic Workshops Intensive; a book of exhibition paintings and photographs titled O'Keeffe and New Mexico: A Sense of Place which includes essays by Barbara Buhler Lynes and by the well-known writers Lesley Poling-Kempes and Frederick W. Turner; a copy of Georgia O'Keeffe in New Mexico: Architecture, Katsinam, and the Land, an exhibition catalogue which reveals the little-known breadth of Georgia O'Keeffe's interest in northern New Mexico and illuminates her keen sensitivity and deep respect for the Native American and Hispano cultures of the region; and a select item from the O’Keeffe Museum Shop.

2nd Place Award
$300 cash-prize; a book of exhibition paintings and photographs titled O'Keeffe and New Mexico: A Sense of Place which includes essays by Barbara Buhler Lynes and by the well-known writers Lesley Poling-Kempes and Frederick W. Turner; a copy of Georgia O'Keeffe in New Mexico: Architecture, Katsinam, and the Land, an exhibition catalogue which reveals the little-known breadth of Georgia O'Keeffe's interest in northern New Mexico and illuminates her keen sensitivity and deep respect for the Native American and Hispano cultures of the region; and a select item from the O’Keeffe Museum Shop.

3rd Place Award
$200 cash-prize; a book of exhibition paintings and photographs titled O'Keeffe and New Mexico: A Sense of Place which includes essays by Barbara Buhler Lynes and by the well-known writers Lesley Poling-Kempes and Frederick W. Turner; a copy of Georgia O'Keeffe in New Mexico: Architecture, Katsinam, and the Land, an exhibition catalogue which reveals the little-known breadth of Georgia O'Keeffe's interest in northern New Mexico and illuminates her keen sensitivity and deep respect for the Native American and Hispano cultures of the region; and a select item from the O’Keeffe Museum Shop.

Student Awards
$100 cash-prize; a book of exhibition paintings and photographs entitled O'Keeffe and New Mexico: A Sense of Place which includes essays by Barbara Buhler Lynes and by the well-known writers Lesley Poling-Kempes and Frederick W. Turner; a copy of Georgia O'Keeffe in New Mexico: Architecture, Katsinam, and the Land, an exhibition catalogue which reveals the little-known breadth of Georgia O'Keeffe's interest in northern New Mexico and illuminates her keen sensitivity and deep respect for the Native American and Hispano cultures of the region; and a select item from the O’Keeffe Museum Shop.

Honorable Mentions
Photo submissions will be posted to the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum website.
For More Information and for Contest Rules, Please Visit the Contest Website: http://www.okmphotocompetition.org

For press inquiries, contact:
Lisa Neal
JLH Media
575 635 5658
lisa(at)jlhmedia(dot)com
###

ABOUT GEORGIA O’KEEFFE MUSEUM:
The Georgia O'Keeffe Museum is dedicated to the artistic legacy of Georgia O'Keeffe, her life, American modernism, and public engagement. The Museum's collections, historic properties, exhibitions, Research Center, publications, and education programs contribute to scholarly discourse and inspire diverse audiences. Located in Santa Fe, NM, the Museum’s collections, exhibits, research center, publications and education programs contribute to scholarly discourse and serve diverse audiences. The largest single repository of the artist’s work in the world, it is the only museum in the world dedicated to an internationally known American woman artist and is the most visited art museum in New Mexico

Friday, June 28, 2013

INTERACTIVE PHOTOGRAPHY PROJECT AT GEORGIA O"KEEFFE MUSEUM



Will Wilson, Self Portrait, Critical Indigenous Photographic Exchange (CIPX), 2012


INTERACTIVE PHOTOGRAPHY PROJECT
MON.–FRI. JULY 8–19 10 AM–4 PM

EXHIBITION
MON.–FRI. JULY 15–19, 10 AM–NOON & 1–4 PM
PHOTOGRAPHIC PORTRAIT SESSIONS
The Critical Indigenous Photographic Exchange (CIPX) is a photographic inquiry and exchange of artist Will Wilson (Diné) and his subjects as he creates studio portraits that engage participants in dialogue and a portrait session using the wet-plate collodion process. Wilson re-creates and re-enacts this performative ritual, which is intensified and refined by his use of a large-format (8 by 10 in.) camera to create a tintype for the sitter. This beautifully alchemic photographic process dramatically contributed to the collective understanding of Native American people and, in so doing, the American identity, demonstrating how an understanding of our world can be acquired through fabricated methods.

Museum visitors can register to be photographed. Each portrait takes approximately 30 minutes. An exhibition of digitally printed portraits from the CIPX series will be on view at the Education Annex July 8—19.

LOCATION: O’Keeffe Education Annex, 123 Grant Avenue.
COST: FREE

Register at Georgia O'Keeffe Museum front desk.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Annie Leibovitz: Places instead of faces



Photographer Annie Leibovitz takes a break from interviews to pose in a gallery of
 her photographs at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe


By Kathaleen Roberts
The Albuquerque Journal

Demi’s pregnant belly. Whoopi’s smile sinking into a bath of milk.

And, of course, John curled around Yoko in fetal submission.

The images of Annie Leibovitz sear the mind like cultural tattoos

But after 44 years of shooting Mick and Keith, the Blues Brothers and a bleeding Pete Townshend, Leibovitz has focused her lens on her own personal “Pilgrimage.” More centered on place and the shadows of their former occupants, these are not the carefully staged and lit portraits associated with the photographer’s rock ‘n’ roll glory years.

There are no people here.

“Annie Leibovitz: Pilgrimage” opens Friday at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe. Leibovitz’s lens leads viewers from O’Keeffe’s Abiquiu home to Elvis’ gun-shot TV set, to Thoreau’s Walden Pond and Virginia Woolf’s writing desk. Arranged as a kind of travelogue, the show includes 57 images taken from the south of England to the Yosemite Valley. In the past, she had always worked fettered by assignments.

For perhaps the first time, she photographed images only when she felt their seduction.

“When you’re a photographer, you don’t stop seeing,” she said. “Stuff gets a hell of a lot more interesting, and you’re better than ever at what you do. It’s reflected in this work.

“You don’t know if you had it in you anymore to just take a picture,” the 63-year-old continued. “I learned that it’s a deep well.”

Oddly, Leibovitz is careful not to call the exhibition photographs. “It’s not beautiful photographs,” she insisted. “It’s note-taking.”

The images span the rhythms of dramatic landscapes (Niagra Falls, Old Faithful), as well as dimly lit interiors –– as the objects and talismans of past lives.

The series germinated from a set of serendipitous encounters that led Leibovitz from accepting the Centenary Medal of the Royal Photographic Society to traveling to Monk’s House, the home of Vanessa Bell, Woolf’s sister, where Leibovitz entered the author’s writing studio to discover both the author’s battered desk and glasses.

From there, she traveled to London, where she photographed Sigmund Freud’s ornate couch after finding it stuffed in a closet. She learned it had been his deathbed, as World War II air-raid alarms roared throughout the neighborhood.

“I was hooked,” she said. “I felt myself totally seduced into the imagery.

“I love the series,” she continued. “I usually don’t think in terms of a single image. One image complements the other like a brother or a sister.”

Stateside, she attended the bar mitzvah of her cousin’s son in Amherst, Mass. Her sister suggested they visit Emily Dickinson’s house, as well as Emily’s brother Austin’s house next door.

“It was getting dark,” Leibovitz said. “It was after five. (Austin’s) house hadn’t been touched at all. It had been left in a Victorian state.”

Armed with a digital camera, Leibovitz was amazed by the clarity with which it captured the dimly lit corners.

She shot Emily’s herbarium of plant specimens, as well as her eyelet-strewn white dress, stored behind Plexiglas. Dickinson had been the favorite poet of Leibovitz’s late partner Susan Sontag, who died in 2004.

From there, Leibovitz came up with an initial list of 12 places. It would eventually swell to encompass 27.

A visit to the Lincoln Memorial turned into a search for the former president that led her through Kentucky, Indiana and finally to Illinois.

“I didn’t know why it moved me to tears,” she said of the Washington, D.C., landmark. But then she realized Lincoln’s shadow traced a through line from Marian Anderson to Eleanor Roosevelt to Martin Luther King Jr.

Roosevelt had invited Anderson to the White House to sing after she was banned from Constitution Hall.

“You’re standing there with your children,” Leibovitz said. “You go on the journeys in your mind. I went looking for Lincoln’s log cabin. I started in Kentucky and ended up at Springfield (Ill.). This was all before Spielberg and the ‘Lincoln’ movie.”

She shot the top hat and bloodstained gloves Lincoln wore to Ford’s Theatre, as well as a first draft of the Gettysburg Address.

Georgia O’Keeffe would become a kind of touchstone. Leibovitz originally discovered the artist through the famous portraits taken of her by her husband, Alfred Stieglitz.

“Stieglitz’s portraits of O’Keeffe are probably the greatest portraits ever done,” she said. “They are just unparalleled. Sometimes I use them during portrait photography workshops.”

Most magazine assignments give the photographer just 15 minutes to work, she added.

“It can’t even begin to compare to what Stieglitz and O’Keeffe did together. When you have the opportunity to make her look into those lenses –– I can’t even talk about it without moving close to tears. We think we knew all about her, but we didn’t.”

When museum staff members escorted Leibovitz to O’Keeffe’s famous Black Place, she couldn’t take her eyes off the rock-scattered ground. Suddenly, she understood why the artist was always photographed bent over and staring at the soil –– she was looking for rocks.
“She was collecting the rocks like seashells,” Leibovitz said.

The photographer was equally mesmerized by a divided drawer in the Georgia O’Keeffe Research Center containing the artist’s pastels, which she had made herself.

“I don’t have the words for it,” Leibovitz said, “… seeing the blue of the sky, the red of the hills, it’s all your landscape here. You feel her fingers on her pastels.”

She found herself quietly weeping over the torn bedsheets in O’Keeffe’s bedroom.

“The bed linens on her bed were threadbare,” she explained. “So she was very frugal. You’re a little bit like a detective. …

“O’Keeffe to me is really the heart of this project. You think you understand someone, and you don’t.”

Leibovitz’s career took off when she was hired by Rolling Stone magazine at the age of 18. She was still a student at the San Francisco Art Institute, where the emphasis was on the work of Robert Frank and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Rolling Stone editor Jann Wenner named her the magazine’s photo chief in 1973, a job she held for 10 years. She was just 24 when she worked as the Rolling Stones’ tour photographer in 1975. Her intimate photographs of rock royalty helped define the magazine’s look. She joined the revived Vanity Fair in 1983.

Leibovitz has long said the Rolling Stones tour was the genesis of her own drug addiction, from which she later recovered.

“My Rolling Stone years were when I was a kid,” she explained. “The fact that I’m still alive –– I’m happy about that. I wasn’t one of those people who want to take pictures of the band on stage. We were all young. No one told you what to do. I was supposed to be taking publicity pictures. That never happened. I didn’t know how the music was made. I never looked at the pictures until much later. It was like a war zone. I learned a lot about power and fame and the pitfalls. It was a quick study in living too fast.”

Leibovitz’s next book will be about artists working in their studios. She can’t think of any celebrities she would want to shoot today.

“I look back, and I wish I could have gotten to Martha Graham,” she said. “I tried for Lucien Freud, but it just didn’t work out.”

But she is not averse to capturing the pop stars of today — even Justin Bieber.

“I’m not against Justin Bieber,” she said. “On the basis of social reporting, I don’t find it uninteresting.”