217 Johnson Street
Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501
505.946.1000
www.okeeffemuseum.org
The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, in Santa Fe, New Mexico, opened to the public in July 1997, eleven years after the death of our namesake artist. A visit to the O’Keeffe Museum offers insight not only into the artist’s paintings, but also her creative process and the light and landscape that inspired her. In addition to the galleries in Santa Fe, the Museum maintains O’Keeffe’s two homes and studios in northern New Mexico, a research center and library, and a variety of collections relating to O’Keeffe and modern art.
Public opening lecture and private member reception: September 26
Also on view: David Bradley, O’Keeffe After Whistler
One of the most significant artists of the 20th century, Georgia O’Keeffe (1887-1986) was devoted to creating imagery that expressed what she called “the wideness and wonder of the world as I live in it.” O’Keeffe’s images — instantly recognizable as her own — include abstractions, large-scale depictions of flowers, leaves, rocks, shells, bones and other natural forms, New York cityscapes and paintings of the unusual shapes and colors of architectural and landscape forms of northern New Mexico.
The Museum’s collections of over 3,000 works comprises 140 O’Keeffe oil paintings, nearly 700 drawings, and hundreds of additional works dating from 1901 to 1984, the year failing eyesight forced O’Keeffe into retirement. Throughout the year, visitors can see a changing selection of these works. In addition, the Museum presents exhibitions that are either devoted entirely to O’Keeffe’s work or combine examples of her art with works by her American modernist contemporaries.
In 2006, the Museum took responsibility for the care and preservation of O’Keeffe’s home and studio along the Chama River in Abiquiu, New Mexico, about an hour north of Santa Fe. A national historic landmark and one of the most important artistic sites in the United States, the home where the artist lived and worked is open for tours by appointment. O’Keeffe’s first home in New Mexico, about 30 minutes northwest of Abiquiu at the Ghost Ranch is also cared for by the Museum though it is not currently open to the public.
The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Research Center opened in July 2001 and is dedicated to the study of American Modernism (late nineteenth century – present). The Center sponsors research in the fields of art history, architectural history and design, literature, music, photography, and other fields. The library collections and unique archives are accessible to researchers, in-house scholars, and the public by appointment.
Educational programs at the Museum serve more than 7,100 students and adults per year with a robust slate of workshops, lectures, conversations, and classroom activities.
From top to bottom and left to right: 1) Arthur Dove (1880-‐1946) Penetration, 1924, oil on wood, Collection of Jan T. and Marica Vilcek, Promised Gift to The Vilcek Foundation; 2) Marsden Hartley (1877–1943) Berlin Series No. 1, 1913, oil on canvas board, Collection of Jan T. and Marica Vilcek, Promised Gift to The Vilcek Foundation; 3) Andrew Dasburg (1887–1979) Ledoux Street, Taos, New Mexico (Harwood), c. 1922, oil on paper board, Collection of Jan T. and Marica Vilcek, Promised Gift to The Vilcek Foundation; 4) Georgia O’Keeffe (1887-1986) Black Place II c. 1945, oil on canvas, The Jan T. and Marica Vilcek Collection © The Vilcek Foundation; 5) Howard Cook (1901–1980) Complex City, c. 1956, oil on canvas, Collection of Jan T. and Marica Vilcek, Promised Gift to The Vilcek Foundation.