Georgia Tatto O’Keefe is a woman painter who truly captured
the Southwest in every piece she created.
She was born in 1887 in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin on a small dairy farm and
decided at the age of 10 that she would be an artist. After graduating high school, she attended
the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, but for a short time. After one year, she moved to New York where
her art really took flight in 1916.
After many years and several annual visits, she moved to the Southwest,
Santa Fe, New Mexico, to really expand her artistic abilities.
Georgia O’Keefe is widely known for her magnified floral
pictures. She would take a small flower
and magnify it hundreds of times onto a canvas.
She wanted to take a different direction than other artists and really
show the beauty of the flower as opposed to just a glimpse. She wanted to really capture its beauty. People were enthralled by her different
approach and loved her pictures.
Once she moved to Santa Fe, she began really capturing the
Southwestern culture. She painted
pictures of adobe churches, cultural objects, and the bones and rocks she would
find lying around the desert floor. She
loved the beauty in everything she saw, and when she felt the right
inspiration, she painted.
As a person coming from New Mexico, I really did not see
anything in the bones lying around, or the churches I would see all the time,
but when I look at Georgia O’Keefe’s paintings, I see so much beauty and I can
see the unique quality of culture that you can really only find in New
Mexico. I think that is what she wanted
to show people.




