Georgia O'Keeffe, Flowers and Sex
Six Paintings. One Concept
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The close-ups and details of flowers that Georgia O'Keeffe painted in large formats were highly praised at the time as they were interpreted as symbols of the female sex. For that reason, feminists considered the artist as a reference.
The irony is that, as she humbly admitted, O'Keeffe's true intention was only to expand the scale, so that when the object was presented in a different, creative way, the viewer would "observe it for the first time" and admire it again. One of the simplest and most wonderful purposes of art in general.
Recommended links:
Six Paintings: Kandinsky and the Biomorphic Abstraction (The Period of Paris).
Six Paintings: Macke and the Color Stains.
Six Paintings: The Last Paintings of Monet, a Touch of Expressionism?
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