Showing posts with label Georgia O'Keeffe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georgia O'Keeffe. Show all posts

Friday, November 16, 2018

Arty Farty Friday, Saturday & Sundry Painters Born in Mid-November.

Six painters of varying styles were born between 14 and 17 November - but in different centuries and decades. I have already written about all of these, over the years - here are links to my relevant posts, with an example of each of their styles.

Claude Monet 14 November 1840.
https://twilightstarsong.blogspot.com/2015/04/arty-farty-friday-monet-in-spring.html


 The Ice Floes - Claude Monet.


Manon Cleary 14 November 1942.
https://twilightstarsong.blogspot.com/2015/11/arty-farty-friday-manon-cleary.html

 Man in Plastic Bag #5 & #6 by Manon Cleary



Georgia O'Keeffe 15 November 1887.
https://twilightstarsong.blogspot.com/2011/12/arty-farty-friday-georgia-okeeffe.html




Wayne Thiebaud 15 November 1920.
https://twilightstarsong.blogspot.com/2013/11/two-artists-born-this-day.html





Arman 17 November 1928.
https://twilightstarsong.blogspot.com/2014/11/arty-farty-friday-arman.html


 Wheels of Fortune by Arman



Jack Vettriano 17 November 1951.
https://twilightstarsong.blogspot.com/2007/05/sun-scorpio-artist-jack-vettriano.html


 Billy Boys by Jack Vettriano


Friday, November 15, 2013

Two Artists Born This Day: O'Keeffe & Thiebaud

I notice that two painters I've featured in past posts have (or had) birthdays today: 15 November - Georgia O'Keeffe and Wayne Thiebaud. They were born 33 years apart, she in 1887, he in 1920. Their styles - and from what I could glean about them - their personalities, could hardly be less similar.

The two posts:

Arty Farty Friday : Georgia O'Keeffe

Arty Farty Friday : Wayne Thiebaud -No Tortured Soul

I'll copy their natal charts and my astro notes here for easy comparison.


It's a 12 noon chart, no birth time is known. Three planets clustered in Scorpio, Moon too if born before 2PM. Venus, planet of the arts, at home in Libra, one of Venus' signs of rulership, along with with Uranus (the eccentric and revolutionary planet). O'Keeffe's style must have seemed somewhat eccentric when first encountered, certainly it was different from almost everything else on the early 20th century art scene. As Wikipedia states: "She revolutionized the tradition of flower painting". Whether some of her representations were intended to be overtly erotic or simply sensual has to be in the eye of the beholder. But how could an intense Scorpio-ness not shine through her work? She denied any intention of eroticism, yet the idea has secured itself in the public imagination. Those studying her paintings may, involuntarily, have been sensing her astrology seeping through!

She is another of that ultra-talented Pluto in Gemini generation. Neptune (creativity), in O'Keeffe's chart is close to Pluto (Scorpio's ruler), though in the last degrees of Taurus (another arty sign ruled by Venus).


Thiebaud's conjoined Sun/Mercury in Scorpio are flanked on one side (via harmonious sextile:60*)by Jupiter/Saturn in detail oriented, disciplined Virgo. On the other side, again via sextile, by Moon/Mars in business-led, common sense Capricorn. The other glyph in Capricorn is Black Moon Lilith - the Moon's apogee (farthest point from the Earth). When close to the Moon in a natal chart this could have some significance, but without knowing much about the man's personal life, it's not possible to make use of the information. He certainly doesn't appear to be lacking in a female side to his personality! Virgo was rising as he was born - reflecting his attention to detail and precise style.

As indicated in the excerpt in the original post, Thiebaud, now 92, seems to be a well balanced individual. I'd like to relate that to the balancing effect of planets in Virgo and Capricorn (both solid reliable Earth signs) on either side of his Sun/Mercury in Scorpio, a sign known to be ultra-emotional, intense - occasionally with a tendency to paranoia. These traits are sweetly (no pun intended) calmed and balanced in Thiebaud's chart.

So, two artists born 15 November, vastly different styles - choose from trays of precisely placed cakes, and neat landscapes with roads and rivers - or - erotically inspired magnifications of flowers and dream-like south-western landscapes.

O'Keeffe's extra helping of Scorpio planets, along with Pluto, Scorpio's ruler in Gemini seems to allow more of textbook Scorpio to shine through her work. Her personality, said to be "prickly" matches the legendary Scorpio sting too, I guess. While Thiebaud is described as " a happy man known for his happy paintings of cakes and pies. It turns out he also has many happy things to say about painting. For example: “I love art history” and “I was a spoiled child. I had a great life, so about the only thing I can do is to paint happy pictures.” Not that O'Keeffe's paintings aren't happy - they are, but happy in a different, arguably more Scorpionic, way. Examples of both are at the linked posts.

Friday, December 30, 2011

Arty Farty Friday ~ Georgia O'Keeffe

I recently received a comment on an old (2006) post of mine on the artist Georgia O'Keeffe. That post was more than a tad ragged, but in those days I was new to blogging and to Blogger. I believe I can do a little better now; so - an improved offering:

Georgia O'Keeffe born 15 November 1887, Sun Prairie, Wisconsin - time unknown. If I had been unable to find Georgia O'Keeffe's birth data, I could have made a guess from her choice of subject matter, and I'd have been correct. The lady, whether she knew it or not, was a Scorpio-type through and through.
(Photo by Alfred Stieglitz)

Her subjects were often enlarged views of the skulls and other bones of animals, flowers and plant organs, shells, rocks, mountains, and other natural forms. Her mysteriously suggestive images of bones and flowers set against a perspectiveless space have inspired a variety of erotic, psychological, and symbolic interpretations. Her later works celebrate the clear skies and desert landscapes of New Mexico, where she moved after her husband's death in 1946. She is regarded by critics as one of the most original and important American artists, and her works are highly popular among the general public. ~~ Britannica



Some of her best known work includes her flower and plant forms such as a 1925 painting. 'Black Iris' - (see right) an elegant work construed by many as being sexually suggestive, though this was denied by the artist. ~~ articons.co.uk"








Georgia O'Keeffe's natal chart shows 3, and possibly 4, planets clustered in Scorpio: Jupiter 17*, Sun 23*, Mercury 27* with Moon at 28* at noon, and definitely in Scorpio if born before 2:00PM, otherwise Moon would have been in early Sagittarius.




Venus, planet of the arts is at home in Libra, one of its signs of rulership, along with with Uranus (the eccentric and revolutionary planet). O'Keefe's style must have seemed somewhat eccentric when first encountered - different from almost everything else on the early 20th century scene. As Wikipedia states: "She revolutionized the tradition of flower painting".

Whether some of her representations were intended to be overtly erotic or simply sensual has to be in the eye of the beholder, I guess. But how could an intense Scorpio-ness not shine through her work? She denied any intention of eroticism, and yet the idea has secured itself in the public imagination. Those studying her paintings may, involuntarily, have been sensing her astrology seeping through!

Here is another of that ultra-talented Pluto in Gemini generation. Neptune (creativity), in O'Keeffe's chart is close to Pluto, though in the last degrees of Taurus (another arty sign ruled by Venus).

Georgia O'Keeffe's family background was a blend of Irish (her father) and Hungarian (her mother). After a childhood spent in Wisconsin her early career was as a commercial artist in Chicago. She went on to teach art in Texas. She later lived with, and eventually married, renonwned photographer Alfred Stieglitz, who had noted her talent and organised her first exhibition. Without his help it's doubtful that her career would have taken off as it did. Opportunities, in those days, for a female in the art world were few, even for a woman as talented and determined as Georgia O'Keeffe.

She was said to have a "prickly personality" (more reflection of Scorpio?). Portraits by several diferent photographers present her as a "loner, a severe figure and self-made person." She spent much of her life in her beloved northern New Mexico, died in 1986 aged 98. Her ashes were scattered from the top of a mountain she had looked out on from her home. She had received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Gerald Ford in 1977 and the National Medal of Arts from Ronald Reagan in 1985.



One sample each of her several styles/subjects:


The skulls ~~~

Summer Days



The abstracts ~~~

Blue and Green Music



The flower studies ~~~

Red Canna



The New Mexico Landscape (my own favourite, for I love New Mexico too).

Black Mesa



For hundreds more examples of O'Keeffe paintings a good place to start is at Google Image, then simply follow the trails.