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Dimensions: measurements 20 by 24 in. alternate measurements (50.8 by 61 cm)
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Provenance: The Downtown Gallery, New York
Mrs. John A. Prosser, Lake Forest, Illinois, 1961
The artist (exchange), 1963
Harold Diamond, New York, 1977
John Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco, California, 1977
Acquired by the present owner from the above, 1977
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Exhibited: New York, The Downtown Gallery, Georgia O'Keeffe: Recent Paintings and Drawings, 1961, no. 1
San Francisco, California, John Berggruen Gallery, Georgia O'Keeffe: Paintings and Watercolors, September-October 1977, no. 21
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Literature: Barbara Buhler Lynes, Georgia O'Keeffe: Catalogue Raisonné, New Haven, Connecticut, 1999, vol. II, no. 1314, p. 825, illustrated in color
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Notes: Painted in 1957.
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF HARRIET WALKER HENDERSON
O'Keeffe had learned from her studies with Arthur Dow that in oriental art "the same theme appears again and again with new beauty, with different quality and complex accompaniments," an observation she put to practical use by repeatedly painting the same subject with constantly changing results. O'Keeffe wrote, "I work on an idea for a long time. It's like getting acquainted with a person, and I don't get acquainted easily...Sometimes I start in a very realistic fashion, and as I go on from one painting to another of the same thing, it becomes simplified till it can be nothing but abstract." In Two Austrian Copper Roses III, O'Keeffe remains faithful to the architecture of the blossom, emphasizing the unusual shapes of species, exploiting the voluptuous roundness of each rose's contours and capturing the imperfect symmetry of their structure. Through subtle graduations of the rich red tones, O'Keeffe renders volumes that convey the tactile quality of the rose.