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Georgia O'Keeffe, Abstraction, 1926.

FLUIDITY OF COLOR IN GEORGIA O’KEEFFE

Gallery assistant Deja Belardo reflects on a favorite painter represented in the Museum’s collection.

I have a print of Georgia O’Keeffe’s Abstraction from 1926 up on a wall in my home studio. My art mentor, Phyllis Biddle, was the first person to introduce me to O’Keeffe. Being from a small island in the Virgin Islands, I immediately understood this artist’s connection to nature and the inherent beauty of objects we often take for granted. I especially appreciate her work these days, as one of the greatest pleasures I have is seeing a new bird fly by my window or a tree that has blossomed seemingly overnight.

When I first visited the Whitney, a few months after moving to New York City from the Virgin Islands, a friend of mine who had worked at the Museum for several years took me straight to a Georgia O’Keeffe painting that was on view (Music, Pink and Blue No. 2). Just about two months later, I began working at the Whitney as a gallery assistant.

When the Museum reopens, I’m excited to see the work of my favorite painter again in the galleries. The fluidity of O’Keeffe’s colors and how she translates other senses and feelings into a visual language that’s all her own is reminiscent of my own identity.

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UPCOMING EVENTS

Roy Lichtenstein, The Conversation (Study), c. 1984.

WHITNEY WEDNESDAYS

Tonight, April 29, at 7 pm

Our new conversation series on Instagram Live brings together diverse voices from our community to talk art, life, and all things Whitney. Tonight, join assistant curator Rujeko Hockley and director of facilities Peter Scott as they discuss what’s getting them through the present moment and share their favorite Whitney memories.

LEARN MORE

Laurie Simmons, Walking Camera II (Jimmy the Camera), 1987.

ART HISTORY FROM HOME

Thursday, April 30, at noon and 6 pm
Tuesday, May 5, at 6 pm

This series of online talks by the Whitney’s Joan Tisch Teaching Fellows highlights works in the Museum’s collection to illuminate critical topics in American art. Join us for upcoming talks exploring technology and fantasy, the role of collective memory in Black contemporary art, and self-portraiture.

LEARN MORE

Korakrit Arunanondchai, still from Painting With History In A Room Filled With People With Funny Names 3, 2015.

WHITNEY SCREENS

Friday, May 1, at 7 pm

As part of our new series of Friday screenings, tune in for Korakrit Arunanondchai’s Painting With History In A Room Filled With People With Funny Names 3—a promised gift to the Museum that investigates the entanglement of spirituality, technology, nature, and memory.

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Betty Woodman, Still Life #11, 1990.

ARTMAKING FROM HOME: DIY POTTERY

Saturday, May 2, at 3 pm

Join a Whitney educator for our latest online artmaking activity designed for all ages. This week, we’ll be mixing our own clay using everyday household materials and creating ceramic sculptures using hand-building techniques.

LEARN MORE

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FROM THE ARCHIVES: THE POWER OF COLOR

Still from "Seminars with Artists: Amy Sillman | Live from the Whitney," 2014

AMY SILLMAN ON COLOR AS MATERIAL

In this 2014 talk, Biennial artist Amy Sillman discusses the ways she explores the materiality of color in her practice.

WATCH NOW

Installation view of Spilling Over: Color in the 1960s

SPILLING OVER: PAINTING COLOR IN THE 1960s

Explore this vibrant 2019 exhibition, which considered how artists in the 1960s used bold, saturated, and hallucinatory color to activate perception.

EXPLORE MORE

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#WHITNEYFROMHOME ON INSTAGRAM

#WhitneyFromHome on Instagram photograph courtesy Margo Delidow
On an ordinary day, Whitney conservator Margo Delidow might be caring for a Jenny Holzer bench or preparing a Roy Lichtenstein sculpture to be sent out on loan. However, during the COVID-19 crisis, she and her partner, conservator Eric Meier, have redirected their skills to a new project.

After hearing of a shortage in hospitals across the country, the duo began making face shields out of Tyvek and foam for use by healthcare professionals. Using their technical skills and community connections, Margo and Eric have been building the shields in their South Bronx home and shipping them to hospitals.

FOLLOW ALONG

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SUPPORT THE WHITNEY

Consider making a gift or becoming a member during this unprecedented time to help the Museum continue all the work that we do to champion American art and artists of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.

MAKE A DONATION
BECOME A MEMBER
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AAQ Resource: Westhampton Architectural Glass

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