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Georgia O'Keeffe / Georgia O'Keeffe.

By: O'Keeffe, Georgia, 1887-1986.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: New York : Viking Press, 1976Description: ca. 200 p. : col. ill. ; 42 cm.ISBN: 0670337080 ; 0670337099.Subject(s): O'Keeffe, Georgia, 1887-1986DDC classification: 759.13 O'KE
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Reference MTU Crawford College of Art and Design Library Folio 759.13 O'KE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Reference 00196607
Total holds: 0
Browsing MTU Crawford College of Art and Design Library shelves, Shelving location: Folio Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
759.06 The moderns, 1945-1975 / 759.06 The moderns, 1945-1975 / 759.13 HOM Winslow Homer / 759.13 O'KE Georgia O'Keeffe / 759.13 ROC The legacy of Norman Rockwell / 759.2 BLA William Blake / 759.2915 PAK A broken sky /

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Kirkus Book Review

My first memory is of the brightness of light--light all around. I was sitting among pillows on a quilt on the ground--very large white pillows. The quilt was a cotton patchwork of two kinds of material. . . ."" So begins this O'Keefe retrospective, which pairs superior color reproductions, suggestive of the originals in size (the pages are 12 x 16), with the artist's running reminiscences and observations. ""It was in the fall of 1915 that I first had the idea that what I had been taught was of little value to me except for the use of materials as a language. . . . But what was I to say with them? I had been taught to work like others and after careful thinking I decided that I wasn't going to spend my life doing what had already been done. . . . I began with charcoal and paper and decided not to use any color until it was impossible to do what I wanted in black and white. I believe it was June before I needed blue."" For Blue Lines, a foretaste of Clifford Still. With the pictures, she recounts her first experience of the plains and canyons of the Southwest, her rediscovery of Manhattan's dramatic vistas; explains why the large flowers, the Lake George barn, the gray shingle and white clam shell from Maine, the odd, enigmatic Cow's Skull: ""I'll make it an American painting. They will not think it great with the red stripes down the sides--Red, White and Blue--but they will notice it."" She returns often to ""the wideness and wonder of the world as I live in it""--and as the reader, looking, will absorb it. Critical judgments are absent, and irrelevant; the one aid is a chronology at the close. With only the commentary, set in a light italic to approximate script, and those enveloping pictures, this discreet volume affords total exposure to a personal, reverberating oeuvre. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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