DENVER, CO.- The Denver Art Museum hosts the traveling exhibition Georgia O'Keeffe in New Mexico: Architecture, Katsinam and the Land, February 10April 28, 2013. The exhibition, organized by the Georgia OKeeffe Museum, brings to light a relatively unknown aspect of OKeeffes art and thinkingher deep respect for the diverse and distinctive cultures of northern New Mexico. The exhibition features 53 OKeeffe works including 15 rarely seen pictures of different Hopi katsina tihu, along with examples of these types of figures. Chronicling her artwork created in New Mexico, the exhibition explores OKeeffes paintings of New Mexicos Hispanic and Native American architecture, cultural objects and her New Mexico landscapes.
This exhibition provides a new way to look at a very popular American artist, said Thomas Smith, director of the Petrie Institute of Western American Art at the DAM. OKeeffe was captivated by the cultures and colorful landscapes of New Mexico. Visitors will have the chance to experience this part of the countryits culture, people and landscapethrough the eyes of the artist.
Georgia O'Keeffe (18871986) began spending part of the year living and working in New Mexico in 1929, a pattern she rarely altered until 1949. She then made northern New Mexico her permanent home three years after the death of her husband, Alfred Stieglitz (18641946), the celebrated photographer and one of Americas first advocates of modern art. In addition to the astonishingly beautiful New Mexico landscapes OKeeffe painted, she was also inspired to paint some of the areas churches, crosses and folk art as well as objects from the Native American cultures, as katsina tithu, commonly referred to as kachina or katsina dolls.
Katsinam, plural for katsina, primarily refers to the supernatural beings that are believed to visit Hopi villagers during half of the year. Katsinam have the power to bring rain, exercise control over the weather, help in many of the everyday activities of the villagers, punish offenders of ceremonial or social laws and, in general, to function as messengers between the spiritual domain and mortals. The figures are used to teach children about the different Hopi katsinam. OKeeffe was privy to viewing many cultural ceremonies and was inspired by the beautifully detailed figurines.
The DAM exhibition will showcase American Indian artworks, such as katsina tithu figurines, to provide viewers with an up-close look at the various cultural artifacts that OKeeffe was exposed to during her time in New Mexico.
While the New Mexico landscape remained a prominent part of OKeeffes life and art, very little has been known or written about her involvement with Native American and Hispanic art and culture. However, almost immediately upon her arrival in New Mexico, she responded to the areas cultural richness. Between 1931 and 1945, for example, O'Keeffe created numerous drawings, watercolors and paintings of katsina tithu. Because she retained and seldom exhibited most of these paintings, they remain generally unknown to the public.