O’Keeffe’s paintings of New York City captured critics’ attention. By the mid-1920s, she was one of America’s most important and successful artists. But O’Keeffe didn’t hesitate to leave the city when she could.
In her 1923-24 Spring, above, O’Keeffe paints a small building in Upstate New York, where she and Stieglitz frequently spent their summers. O’Keeffe continues to use clean lines and simple shapes, maintaining her Precisionist technique even as she focuses on a setting in the countryside. In fact, O’Keeffe chose not to paint the chimney and the siding that were on the building. She does incorporate flowers, clouds, and grass, which add a softness to the image.
This artwork foreshadows elements of the artist’s future. Around the same time, O’Keeffe began experimenting with tightly-cropped, abstract paintings of flowers. Today most people know her for these now-iconic artworks.