In Her “New Yorks,” Georgia O’Keeffe Finds Where Discernability Falls Apart

The High's exhibition of the artist's city paintings demonstrates that scrutiny often leads not to greater definition but to a collapse of understanding.

Georgia O'Keeffe
Georgia O’Keeffe in New York City, circa 1944. Photo by Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

The widespread understanding of Georgia O’Keeffe’s oeuvre is incomplete. The great modernist abstractionist is, rightfully so, galvanized as a painter of abstract floral compositions. Closely cropped compositions of flora, rendered in hard-edged oil paint or watercolor, are the titular artworks associated with the artist’s name. They are remarkable, but much like the compositions themselves, they do not show the artist in her entirety. Beyond her flora paintings, O’Keeffe has a prolific and prodigious career in landscape and cityscape painting—the subject of “Georgia O’Keeffe: My New Yorks” now on at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta.

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This exhibition functions as a kind of retrospective—which is to say, the artworks proceed chronologically through a five-year span of O’Keeffe’s life, beginning in 1924 when O’Keeffe and her husband, Alfred Stieglitz, moved into the Shelton Hotel, then the world’s tallest residential skyscraper. The exhibition begins with the paintings of nature O’Keeffe was making immediately prior to this move to elevation, like Pattern of Leaves (1923)—a close-up of foliage featuring O’Keeffe’s hallmarks: sensuous, flowing lines, overlapping shapes and measured use of color.

A richly colored painting shows a large, deep red leaf with bright yellow veins prominently centered. The background is a contrast of soft green and white, resembling foliage or flower petals.
Georgia O’Keeffe, Pattern of Leaves, 1923, oil on canvas, 22 1/8 × 18 1/8 in., The Phillips Collection, Acquired 1926. © Georgia O'Keeffe Museum. Courtesy of the Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.

In the next room hangs The Shelton with Sunspots, N.Y. (1926)—a street-level perspective of the skyscraper in which O’Keeffe lived. Painted around midday in silhouette, the building is a looming gray mass softened as the sun peeks around and partially swallows it with its blinding rays. The exhibition ends with artworks following O’Keeffe’s move to Santa Fe, NM, like Cow’s Skull with Calico Roses (1931)—a still-life of the eponymous objects rendered with O’Keeffe’s trademark sensitivity and softness. Providing transitions into and out of New York bookends the exhibition, elegantly framing this brief but extraordinary chapter in O’Keeffe’s life and career not as an aberration but as an integral part of a throughline.

A close-up of abstract, soft, gray folds is painted, intersected by thin yellow lines. The image suggests fabric or layered surfaces with geometric precision and subtle shading.
Georgia O’Keeffe, New York – Night (Madison Avenue), 1926; oil on canvas, 32 × 12 in., Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, Florida, gift of Charles C. & Margaret Stevenson Henderson in memory of Hunt Henderson (1971), 1971.31. © Georgia O'Keeffe Museum. Courtesy of the Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, Florida.

Despite O’Keeffe’s frequent use of the still-life, abstraction is the core of her practice, as seen in New York – Night (Madison Avenue) (1926). This nearly all-white painting is a simple composition of intersecting lines and cloudy shadows. Completely devoid of recognizable pictorial elements, the title of this painting points to its inspiration as a view of an arterial avenue in New York, as seen from above, its details obscured by height and lack of illumination. While drawing from the observable world, O’Keeffe was always analyzing the ways discernability falls apart.

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Scrutiny leads not to greater definition and understanding but a collapse of them. Abstraction is not an intentional step into undefinition but an eventuality of close examination. This phenomenon is an approach that should be applied to O’Keeffe herself, as exemplified by the first artwork encountered in this exhibition: New York Street with Moon (1925). One of many cityscapes in the High’s show, its debut was a contentious one. Originally intended to debut in the 1925 exhibition Seven Americans, curated by Stieglitz, O’Keeffe’s efforts were stymied as Steiglitz believed O’Keeffe should “leave paintings of the city to the men.” It was not until a year later that O’Keeffe succeeded, exhibiting it in a solo exhibition, much to the chagrin of Stieglitz and the delight of O’Keeffe—the painting sold for a respectable sum.

A painting depicts a night scene with dark, angular building silhouettes framing the composition. Above, a glowing white streetlamp with a red light beneath it contrasts against the deep blue sky, where a moon and swirling clouds are visible.
Georgia O’Keeffe, New York Street with Moon, 1925; oil on canvas, mounted to Masonite, 48 1/16 × 30 3/8 in., Colección Carmen Thyssen. © Georgia O’Keeffe Museum / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

O’Keeffe’s defiance of Stieglitz and the High Museum’s exhibition unravel the widespread (mis)understanding of the artist’s oeuvre, proving the futility of attempting to rigidly define any one subject. While this unspooling can certainly lead to any number of possible reinterpretations, this exhibition points a way forward. Focusing on a seemingly erroneous chapter in O’Keeffe’s life, this exhibition presents masterful artworks that are interrelated but markedly separate from her more popular artworks. As this exhibition shows, it is within these deviations and miscellanea that often the most fruitful work can be found, if only preconceived notions can be dispelled.

Georgia O’Keeffe: My New Yorks” is on view at the High Museum of Art through February 16, 2025.

A painting features towering skyscrapers with smoke rising against a pale gray and white sky. The sun or moon shines faintly through the haze, and yellow and orange circles resembling lights appear along the buildings.
Georgia O’Keeffe, The Shelton with Sunspots, N.Y., 1926; oil on canvas, 48 1/4 × 30 1/4 inches, The Art Institute of Chicago, gift of Leigh B. Block, 1985.206. © Georgia O'Keeffe Museum
In Her “New Yorks,” Georgia O’Keeffe Finds Where Discernability Falls Apart