For many vanguard artists in the early twentieth century, music offered a model for expressing nonverbal emotional states and sensations. Georgia O'Keeffe was fascinated with what she called "the idea that music could be translated into something for the eye," but her references to music in the titles of her paintings derived equally from her belief that visual art, like music, could convey powerful emotions independent of representational subject matter. In Music—Pink and Blue II, the swelling, undulating forms imply a connection between the visual and the aural, while also suggesting the rhythms and harmonies that O'Keeffe perceived in nature.
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Georgia O'Keeffe, Music, Pink and Blue No. 2 | Video in American Sign Language
Georgia O'Keeffe: Abstraction
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Georgia O'Keeffe, Music, Pink and Blue No. 2, 1918
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Wanda Corn: Cuando estas pinturas fueron exhibidas por primera vez, los críticos solían descubrir formas femeninas en ellas. Veían alusiones al útero o a los órganos reproductivos femeninos. Veían colores femeninos, como rosas, azules y lavandas. Y se interpretaron como pinturas que solo podían estar realizadas por una inteligencia femenina.
Esta fue una manera común de hablar acerca de las pinturas tempranas de O'Keeffe. Y fue causada por su esposo Alfred Stieglitz, que gustaba de leer en las pinturas de O'Keeffe una expresión del eterno femenino.
O'Keeffe misma sintió que ese era más un comentario sobre la crítica que sobre lo que ella había pretendido. Con frecuencia decía que su pintura era acerca de formas naturales, pero que no estaban ligadas exclusivamente al cuerpo femenino. Y ella hubiera preferido que el observador viera en una obra como esta una especie de deslizamiento de la forma que no se puede vincular a ninguna cosa en particular, bien sea una flor o un cuerpo femenino o un paisaje, sino que guarda alusiones poéticas con todos los anteriores.
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Georgia O'Keeffe, Music, Pink and Blue No. 2, 1918
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Narrador: Con sus pliegues suaves como pétalos, esta pintura de Georgia O'Keeffe pareciera ser floral, pero no representa ninguna flor en particular. Es una abstracción a la cual la artista dio una forma natural, orgánica. En 1918, cuando O'Keeffe pintó este lienzo, el arte abstracto era muy nuevo y radical: las primeras pinturas totalmente abstractas se habían realizado apenas ocho años antes. Sin embargo, el título que O'Keeffe dio a esta obra —Music Pink and Blue— sugiere que las ideas detrás del arte abstracto ya formaban parte de la cultura occidental. Hacía ya mucho tiempo que se entendía la música como un arte expresivo, aunque careciera de narración o contenido representacional. Al equiparar su pintura con la música, O'Keeffe sugiere que la forma y el color puros también tienen un poder expresivo.
Wanda Corn: Uno de los rasgos de esta pintura es la hermosa sensación de movimiento que se tiene cuando nada es estático en la imagen.
Narrador:Wanda Corn es historiadora de arte estadounidense.
Wanda Corn: El observador siente que cada forma respira y se abre a la forma siguiente. Este es un concepto muy importante: el de mantener formas en un estado potencial. Era algo que los artistas intentaban plasmar en sus abstracciones de fines de la década de 1910, y aquí O'Keeffe responde a ese concepto del tiempo que no se detiene, al del movimiento constante en la propia obra.
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Georgia O'Keeffe, Music, Pink and Blue No. 2, 1918
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Narrator:Georgia O'Keeffe was inspired by things she saw in nature. Even in an abstract painting like this one, she used curvy, flowing lines and brilliant colors that might suggest something natural, like a blooming flower or a shell.
In many of her paintings, O'Keeffe draws your eye from the edge to the center. Here, it moves from a pale billowy arc into deep blue.
Can you picture yourself in this painting? Would you cocoon yourself in the center? Slip along the outer edge? Or wrap the colors around you like a scarf?
O'Keeffe wanted her paintings to express feelings that she didn't have words for. She called this painting Music, Pink and Blue No. 2. Music can express feelings even when it's instrumental, and doesn't have lyrics. O'Keeffe thought paintings could be the same way—they didn't need to have identifiable images. They could communicate in other ways. Can you see the rhythms in this painting?
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Georgia O'Keeffe, Music, Pink and Blue No. 2, 1918
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Wanda Corn: When these paintings were seen for the first time, very often critics would see in them female forms. They would see in it allusions to the womb or to female reproductive organs. They would see womanly colors such as the pinks, the blues and the lavender. And it would be read as a painting that was one that could only have been made by a female intelligence.
This was a common way of talking about O'Keeffe's paintings in her early years. It was one that was prompted by her husband Alfred Stieglitz who liked to read in O'Keeffe's paintings an expression of the sort of eternal female.
O'Keeffe herself felt as if that was more a comment on the critic than what she intended. She often would say it's about natural forms, but it's not to be tied to exclusively the female body. And she would have you rather see in a work like this a kind of slipperiness of form where you can't tie it to any one thing, be it a flower or be it a female body or be it a landscape. But that it has poetic allusions to all of those.
Exhibitions
At the Dawn of a New Age: Early Twentieth-Century American Modernism
On view
The Whitney's Collection: Selections from 1900 to 1965
On view
Where We Are: Selections from the Whitney's Collection, 1900–1960
Apr 28, 2017–June 2, 2019
America Is Hard to See
May 1–Sept 27, 2015
American Legends: From Calder to O'Keeffe
Dec 22, 2012–June 29, 2014
Georgia O'Keeffe: Abstraction
Sept 17, 2009–Jan 17, 2010
Highlights from the Permanent Collection: From Hopper to Mid-Century
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