The painter Georgia O’Keeffe is known for her bold paintings of landscapes and flowers. When talking about those famous flowers, she said: “Nobody sees a flower–really–it is so small–we haven’t ...
WASHINGTON — Like pubescent children, the oil paintings of Georgia O’Keeffe have been breaking out with “acne” as they age, and now scientists know why. Tiny blisters, which can cause paint to crack ...
Breakthroughs, discoveries, and DIY tips sent six days a week. Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Georgia O’Keeffe is famous for her flowers—erotic red canna ...
Harold Stein, [Georgia O’Keeffe on Leho‘ula Beach, near ‘Aleamai, Hāna, Maui], 1939, Gelatin silver print Alfred Stieglitz/Georgia O’Keeffe Archive, Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke ...
The Latest on an effort to keep some Georgia O'Keeffe paintings from fading. (all times local): 11:28 a.m. Chemical reactions are threatening to discolor and deform the surface of Georgia O'Keeffe's ...
When you hear the name O’Keeffe, who pops into your mind? Probably Georgia. Her sensual, pastel-colored flowers and stark but soft desert landscape paintings are iconic. But there was more than one ...
A clear and engaging look at Georgia O’Keeffe’s groundbreaking career, tracing how she resisted labels and transformed American art through her bold, independent vision.
The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum is selling three O’Keeffe paintings in New York this week to benefit the museum’s acquisition fund, including two that will appear in Sotheby’s contemporary evening sale ...
A painting made by artist Georgia O'Keeffe is back on display after being restored due to tarantula damage. While that might seem a bit ridiculous, the job put into the 1948 piece entitled "Spring" is ...
Georgia O’Keeffe wasn’t particularly interested in visiting Hawaii, but when she was offered an all-expenses paid trip there in 1939, she couldn’t turn it down. Though the artist only spent nine weeks ...
Even Georgia O’Keeffe noticed the pin-sized blisters bubbling on the surface of her paintings. For decades, conservationists and scholars assumed these tiny protrusions were grains of sand, kicked up ...