Portrait of the artist in black and white
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Jennifer K Mahal
In soft shades of gray and harsh curves of black, photographer Todd
Webb gives us entrance into the New Mexico world of Georgia O’Keeffe.
The 39 photographs on display until January at the Orange County
Museum of Art’s Satellite Gallery in South Coast Plaza span nearly 30
years of the famed painter’s life -- from 1955 to 1981.
“In Webb’s photos of New Mexico, we see the landscape and O’Keeffe
through the eyes of another artist,” Sarah Vure, curator at the Newport
Beach-based museum, said of “Georgia O’Keeffe: The Artist’s Landscape,”
An O’Keeffe painting and its subject capture Webb’s lens in one
photograph. Another shows a chair, a skull and a bone against the adobe
wall of Ghost Ranch, one of O’Keeffe’s two homes, in 1959.
There is the artist walking through a stream in Twilight Canyon near
Lake Powell in 1964, her back to the camera that captures the slashes of
light that fall through the rock faces.
“Characteristically, O’Keefe remains an enigmatic presence in these
pictures,” said Jack Woody in the companion book to the exhibit, which he
originally curated. “When confronted by the camera she does not catch the
photographer’s eye.”
O’Keeffe, who died in 1986, was one of the most photographed artists
in the world. Her husband, famed New York photographer Alfred Stieglitz,
took more than 300 portraits of her before his death in 1946.
But it is Webb who captured her later in life, exposing the austere
serenity in which she lived in New Mexico.
Born in Detroit in 1905, Webb became inspired to become a photographer
after taking a 10-day workshop taught by Ansel Adams. He tried to emulate
Adams’ vision at first, but soon realized it was not working for him.
Webb spent two years as a Naval photographer with the Seventh Fleet in
the South Pacific before being discharged and moving to New York. It was
there, taking shots of the city’s streets in 1946, that Webb became
acquainted with Stieglitz.
“He was told to show his photos to Alfred Stieglitz at American Palace
gallery in early ‘40s,” Vure said. “He made arrangements with Dorothy
Norman (Stieglitz’s assistant) and was surprised that Stieglitz came out
and looked.”
Webb and Stieglitz became friends. Through that friendship, Webb met
Beaumont and Nancy Newhall, curators of the Museum of Modern Art, who
helped him to get an exhibition at the Museum of the City of New York.
That exhibition led to Webb’s first professional assignment and later to
his work for Standard Oil.
In 1955, Webb received a Guggenheim Fellowship to take photos of the
trails used to get to the California and Oregon gold rushes. On his way
west, he stopped by New Mexico to see O’Keeffe. He fell in love with the
area, moving there with his wife, Lucille, in 1961. They lived there for
nine years.
It is the black and white pictures from those years, plus the shots he
took between 1957 and 1960 while visiting O’Keeffe for the summers, that
comprise most of the exhibit.
To get a better idea of how completely Webb, who died in 2000,saw
O’Keeffe’s world, it is necessary to look at some of his other work. His
image of 125th Street in Harlem focuses on a peeling movie poster for
“Her Heaven” in Technicolor. His vision of Madison Street at Pike Street
in New York -- an almost abandoned street with a bridge in the
background, almost hovering.
Webb’s work, shaded in varying hues of gray, is lonely. Rather like
O’Keeffe’s paintings.
“You can see their shared interest in early modernism and simplicity
of light and dark, and how important New Mexico landscape was to this
vision,” Vure said.
FYI
What: “Georgia O’Keeffe: The Artist’s Landscape”
Where: Orange County Museum of Art’s Satellite Gallery at South Coast
Plaza, 3333 Bristol St., Costa Mesa
When: 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Saturday and 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Sunday through Jan. 2
Cost: Free
Call: (949) 749-1122
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