Georgia O’Keeffe, health food devotee: the pioneer of modernism’s favourite recipes | Art (2024)

Art

The American artist lived until she was 98 – and a new book of her favourite recipes might give some clues as to how

Carmel Melouney

Mon 26 Jun 2017 19.00 BST

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6 years old

Georgia O’Keeffe was an icon of the American art world: a pioneer of abstract modernism, with boldly innovative paintings of flowers and bleached animal skulls. Lesser known is that her diet, too, was ahead of its time.

A new cookbook of O’Keeffe’s personal recipes – Dinner with Georgia O’Keeffe: Recipes, Art and Landscape, by the Australian author Robyn Lea – reveals she was a forerunner to today’s organic, slow food movement, a health food devotee who made her own yoghurt.

A hundred years ago, O’Keeffe’s first solo exhibition opened in New York and, in 2014, her 1932 painting Jimson Weed/White Flower No 1 set a record price for a work by a female artist, selling at Sotheby’s for $44.4m. With her art so highly coveted, it is unsurprising that an astute luxury publisher such as Assouline believes there is also a receptive market awaiting her recipes. But her lifestyle habits will be of interest to an audience beyond art aficionados since O’Keeffe lived until the age of 98.

In photographs, O’Keeffe appears unsmiling and stern-looking, dressed in a largely androgynous uniform of monochromes and striking silhouettes. She was often photographed by her husband and mentor, the photographer and gallerist Alfred Stieglitz – but knowing what she liked to eat goes some way to humanise her beyond his powerful black and white images.

“You kind of feel like you’re reading someone’s diary in a way, eating the food they ate, because it’s quite a personal thing,” Lea says. “She really was quite a force for this new way of thinking across so many levels, whether in art, food, dress and interiors.”

The book is a companion piece of sorts to Lea’s 2015 book, Dinner with Jackson Pollock, which featured the personal recipes of the celebrated modern painter. Lea believes it is natural that she should follow up her Pollock book with one on O’Keeffe. “If you think of the hero male icon and the hero female icon of the 20th century in art in America, they are the two.”

When Lea began conducting online research from her home in Melbourne, she knew nothing of O’Keeffe’s eating habits. It was four months later in March 2016 that she visited the Georgia O’Keeffe Research Centre in New Mexico and discovered a trove of O’Keeffe’s handwritten recipes, along with magazine cuttings and instructional manuals for her yoghurt maker and various kitchen accoutrements. “What fascinated me was how the three elements of food, art and nature worked together both visually and philosophically in O’Keeffe’s life,” Lea says.

Stieglitz described his wife as “quite a cook, loves experimenting – is in everything she does, what she is as a painter [sic]”. During summers with the Stieglitz family at Lake George in upstate New York, O’Keeffe made meals so delicious that Stieglitz even joked about opening a restaurant.

O’Keeffe had been raised on a farm in Wisconsin, and made the first of many trips to northern New Mexico in the summer of 1929. The stark landscape had a profound influence on her art. From the mid-1930s, she began spending a lot more time in New Mexico, away from Stieglitz in New York. In 1940, she bought a house at Ghost Ranch, northwest of Santa Fe. At the end of 1945, she bought a second property only 25km from the Ghost Ranch, a ruined hacienda in the village of Abiquiú. It was here that she finally grew her dream garden of fruit and vegetables. O’Keeffe moved to Abiquiu permanently in 1949, three years after Stieglitz’s death, and she remained in New Mexico until her death in 1986.

Lea’s book reveals the great lengths O’Keeffe went to to procure superior quality raw ingredients. She requested walnuts, dates, wheat germ and brewer’s yeast from her sister Claudia, while goat’s milk was procured from neighbouring Franciscan priests. O’Keeffe believed water had to already be boiling before corn was picked from the garden (to avoid loss of vitamins); organic whole grains needed to be ground for homemade bread; and herbs were to be harvested from the garden and hung to dry. O’Keeffe was also a devotee of health drinks such as vitamin A co*cktail, a vegetable juice, and Tiger’s Milk, a yogurt and fruit drink.

O’Keeffe was passionate about sharing her nutritional knowledge with others and would make healthy smoothies for friends on neighbouring properties, insisting they drank them. “Even her gardener, she’d make him have these smoothies saying, ‘You’ll live longer, you’ll be healthier,’” Lea says.

Fifty of her favourite recipes are included in Lea’s book, including brightly coloured vegetable soups (a creamy carrot soup adorns the cover) as well as breads and salads. Lea says she isn’t sure whether the vivid colours in O’Keeffe’s recipes was motivated by her obsession with colour, or more because she only wanted things only cooked to the point where they were right to eat and not over boiled. But it’s hard not to conclude that the colours of such healthy dishes must have pleased the artist.

O’Keeffe also believed that food could enhance artistic output. The book contains an anecdote about O’Keeffe quizzing the artist John Marin about what he ate for breakfast on the day he painted three works admired by O’Keeffe. “She really did believe that, if you ate something good for breakfast, that had the power to help your creative work, your expression,” Lea says. While such thinking is common now, it was not in 1925.

“It feels like a new discovery in a way, that people are talking like that today, but it seems she was thinking that way before these ideas were scientifically proven.”

• Dinner with Georgia O’Keeffe: Recipes, Art and Landscape will be launched in Australia at the Art Gallery of New South Wales on 5 July, to coincide with O’Keeffe, Preston, Cossington Smith: Making Modernism, which opens at AGNSW on 1 July

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Georgia O’Keeffe, health food devotee: the pioneer of modernism’s favourite recipes | Art (2024)

FAQs

What was Georgia O Keeffe's famous quote? ›

1. "I've been absolutely terrified every moment of my life and I've never let it keep me from a single thing that I wanted to do."

What do Georgia O Keeffe paintings symbolize? ›

Georgia O'Keeffe was a modernist painter, renowned for her distinctive enlarged flower paintings. Though she rejected efforts to prescribe specific meanings to her art, O'Keeffe's flower pieces frequently evoke themes of femininity, sexuality, and organic abstraction.

What was Georgia O Keeffe's favorite things? ›

Some of her favorite subjects were lilacs, daisies, irises, petunias, calla lilies, orchids, sun- flowers, roses, and jack-in-the-pulpits. O'Keeffe's high school art teacher first introduced her to jack-in-the-pulpits during a lesson.

What did Georgia O Keefe create art using? ›

O'Keeffe's facility with a variety of media—pastel, charcoal, watercolor, and oil—combined with her sense for line, color, and composition to produce deceptively simple works. Her confidence in handling these elements makes her style of painting look effortless.

What is Georgia O Keeffe's personality? ›

As an ISFP, Georgia tends to be creative, unconventional, and empathetic. Georgia generally has a strong grasp of their senses and often has very vivid memories.

What was Georgia O Keeffe's style and technique? ›

Lines in her paintings and drawings are curvy and sinuous, like a winding river. O'Keeffe created a unique fusion of realism and abstraction. Although she worked from identifiable subject matter, she abstracted it in her own way. The positive and negative shapes in many of her paintings are simple and graphic.

What was Georgia O Keeffe's clothing style? ›

Her designs were refined, simple black and white affairs that featured feminine flourishes like discreet pleating and delicate fabrics, but were gender-neutral in appearance.

What is a fact about Georgia O Keeffe art? ›

Flower paintings make up a small percentage of O'Keeffe's paintings. Though O'Keeffe is most famous for her lovingly rendered close-ups of flowers - like Black Iris and Oriental Poppies - these make up just about 200 of her 2000-plus paintings. The rest primarily depict landscapes, leaves, rocks, shells, and bones.

What was Georgia O Keeffe's most famous picture? ›

In 1936, Georgia O'Keeffe finished her oil painting, Summer Days, which came to be known as one of her most famous works. The painting shows a desert below a deer skull and wildflowers, in a similar style to Ram's Head White Hollyhock and Little Hills.

What was Georgia O Keeffe's famous flower? ›

Examples of some of her close-up images of flowers include Oriental Poppies, several Red Canna paintings, and what has been described as her first large-scale flower painting, Petunia No. 2 (1924).

What was Georgia O Keeffe's largest painting? ›

The final, fourth work in this cycle, Sky Above Clouds IV, is the largest painting ever created by the artist, at two meters (eight feet) high and seven meters (24 feet) wide. O'Keeffe completed this monumental work at the age of 77 in the summer of 1965.

Does O Keefe beer still exist? ›

In 1989, Carling O'Keefe merged with Molson Breweries Canada Ltd to become Molson Companies Ltd, now Molson Coors Brewing Company. Three Carling O'Keefe brands are currently available in Canada as part of the Molson Coors portfolio: Carling Lager, Carling Black Label, and O'Keefe's.

Who did Georgia O Keeffe marry? ›

Alfred Stieglitz of Lake George, New York, and Miss Georgia T. O'Keeffe of Lake George, New York, were by [Joseph M. Marini] united in Holy Matrimony according to the ordinance of God and the laws of New Jersey at Cliffside Park on the Eleventh day of December 1924."

What was Georgia O Keeffe's color theory? ›

In her art, she liked the idea of expressing herself through using line, color and shading in a harmonious way. She believed that “colors and shapes make a more definite statement than words.” And therefor created mostly modern abstract paintings.

What is one of Maya Angelou's famous quotes? ›

Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better.” “We may encounter many defeats, but we must not be defeated. It may even be necessary to encounter the defeat, so that we can know who we are.”

What is a famous quote from Yayoi Kusama? ›

I think I will be able to, in the end, rise above the clouds and climb the stairs to Heaven, and I will look down on my beautiful life. I hope royalty continues forever. This is the thing that can contribute to peace throughout the world.

What is the quote paint flowers? ›

Quote by Frida Kahlo: “I paint flowers so they will not die.

Who was the founder of Georgia quote? ›

James Oglethorpe: His Founding Words

James Oglethorpe quote. "The air is healthy, being always ferene, pleafant, and temperate, never subject to exceffive heat or cold, nor to sudden changes. the winter is regular and short and the summer cooled with refreshing breezes.

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