Georgia O’keeffe was born on November 15, 1887, in Sun Prairie Wisconsin. She then died on March 6, 1986, in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Her spouse’s name was Alfred Stieglitz (m. 1924-1946). At a young age, Georgia started painting and doing art work. She went to study at the Institute of Chicago in the early 1900s, she later studied with some other artists such as William Merritt Chase as a member of the Art Student League. Georgia O’keeffe’s mother’s name was Ida O’keeffe, her father’s name was Francis O’keeffe. Her sisters were Claudia O’keeffe, Anita O’keeffe, Ida O’keeffe, and Catherine O’keeffe. Her brothers were Francis O’keeffe Jr. and Alexius O’keeffe. This 9 family household lived on a farm just outside of Madison, Wisconsin. Her family
At the age of 31 Buchanan enrolled in a class at the Art Students League in 1971. This class was taught by Norman Lewis. Lewis became a great friend and mentor. 6 years later she moved to Georgia to satisfy her longing to become an artist.
Georgia O'Keeffe is one of the most influential artists there is today. Her works are valued highly and are quite beautiful and unique. As a prominent
Georgia O’Keeffe was born to the parents of Francis Calyxtus O’Keeffe and Ida (Totto) O’Keeffe on November 15, 1887 near Wisconsin. Georgia was the second oldest child and by the age of ten she knew she wanted to become an artist someday. Her first aspiration was doing abstracts. She was selective about what she painted, but often times she would paint to please others and not herself. Her paintings were thought of as sexual paintings because of the way they were drawn and painted in which she would say is one’s own opinion. Georgia O’Keeffe was best known for her flower canvas and southwestern landscapes. Her husband who is a famous photographer by the name of Alfred Stieglitz used to paint nice portraits of her. She was very fond of him, they both liked what each other did as far as how they were making ends meet, and he just didn’t want her to sell any of her paintings. He would often times tell people “No” so they wouldn’t buy any of her paintings because he wanted them all to himself. She had an interest in nature and used bright colors in her paintings.
Augusta Savage was born on February 29, 1892, in Green Cove Springs, Florida. Savage began making art at an early age using clay that she could find. She enjoyed making animals and other small objects yet her father, who was a Methodist minister, did not approve of her hobby. He did all that he could to stop her. Savage once said her father “almost whipped all of the art out of me” (Savage). Even though her father objected her hobby, she continued to make sculptures. The family moved to West Palm Beach, Florida in 1915. After this move Savage faced a new problem, a lack of clay. She eventually found some clay from a local potter and created a few figures that she entered in a county fair. Her work received a winning prize and the support of George Graham, the fair’s organizer, who encouraged her to study art. Savaged moved to New York City in the 1920’s, but struggled financially throughout her life. She studied at the Cooper Union and she received a scholarship after her first year to help with living expenses. She exceled at the Union and finished in three years instead of the usual four. Savage learned
The family lives in a rural, Northern Minnesota town. At the entrance to their house, there is a picture demonstrating the family unit. The mother appears organized, because she was
Georgia O’Keefe was born November 15, 1887 where she was the second child out of seven in her family. She spent most of her time growing up on a farm in Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. O’Keeffe when to an art institute in Chicago and New York wear she learned the lifestyle of realist painting. O’Keefe started mailing some of her drawings to a friend that lived in New York but her friends saw the talent that O’Keefe had and sent them to a guy named Alfred Stieglitz (art dealer) where he would soon become O’Keefe’s husband. In 1915 Georgia O’Keeffe taught art school in South Carolina and in Texas. At this time O’Keefe was trying to figure herself out on what kind of artist she wanted to be which led her to charcoal drawing. O’Keeffe’s charcoal drawings made her one of the first
Sherman didn’t start getting into art until she started college at the State University College in Buffalo, New York. (Jankauskas). In her biography on her official website, she states, "It wasn't until college that I had any concept of what was going on in the art world.” (Biography - Cindy Sherman). She started going to school for painting but then began to realize that photography would be a better median for her artwork. (Jankauskas). Sherman did
When she began creating beautiful artwork in school and was being commended by other teachers and students, she gained an incredible sense of self worth and put her painful childhood in the back of her mind. (19) She grew up to be a very strong, independent person and she did not care if she was judged, as long as she liked who she was. As a result of her father leaving when she was young, she felt that males were not good enough for her and she developed a strong sense of feminism. In fact, for awhile, Georgia explored her sexuality and dated predominantly women for a significant part of her life. This factor did effect her painting, but not in a sexual way. She painted images that were ‘close ups’, allowing you to see deep into them and to be close to them. She yearned to be close to someone but was afraid to be hurt again. Georgia’s non-traditional lifestyle did affect her life, but did not force her to create sexual female images. “It may be more accurate to read her drawings as intimations of a less literal and more profound view of reality.” (Peters 29)
She lived in a 15-acre Christmas tree farm with her mother and father (Doyle, 2015).
Mary Flannery O’Connor was an American writer. An important impact in American literature, she wrote two novels and thirty-two short stories, and six commentaries .She was a Southern writer who often wrote in a Southern Gothic style and relied heavily on regional settings and grotesque characters(Dunne). Her writing also reflected her own Roman Catholic faith, and frequently examined questions of morality and ethics. Flannery O’Connor was a very influential writer from the American Modernism era, mainly because she effectively reintroduced the Gothic literary tradition and mixed it with the Southern literary form.
Mary Flannery O'Connor was born in Savannah,Georgia on March 25, 1925. O'Connor was born into a Catholic family. At the age of 15 she lost her father to lupus erythematosus. Even after the loss of her father, who she was very
2. Georgia O’Keeffe began to paint skyscrapers while she was living in New York in the Shelton Hotel. By living on a very high floor of the hotel, her and her husband, Alfred Stieglitz, felt untouchable. She felt that skyscrapers were the first American structure to capture international attention, and that they gave New York a unique and global type of quality. One of her paintings was of the Radiator Building, which when she painted, she wrote her husband’s name to promote his paintings. O’Keeffe’s first city picture was “New York at Night
Nancy Hart was born in North Carolina the year of 1735. Sadly she died in 1830 in Kentucky. In my report on Nancy Hart you will learn about her childhood, how she impacted people's life and other interesting facts.
family who used to live there - two parents, and maybe three of four children, with nice
was born in 1926. Golda Myerson was now a young mother and she had to spend the