5 April

Abstract Flower Art: “Nobody Sees A Flower…You Cannot Ignore Its Beauty If It’s Painted On A Large Scale…” Georgia O’Keeffe.

by Jon Katz

Georgia O’Keeffe, my unconscious teacher and inspiration about flower photography, said in interviews that her style of flower photography came from the fact that most people didn’t look at flower photos anymore because they saw so many photographs that they had lost excitement or interest. Flower photos had become boring. That was true of me.

Nobody sees a flower,” O’Keeffe told an interviewer, “really. It is so small, we haven’t got any time. And to see things takes time – like having a friend takes time. I decided that you could not ignore its beauty if I could paint that flower on a huge scale.”

 

(My assistant often looks like the devil he can be. When I go out to paint my photos, he comes along with me. He sits outside the back door window if I am late, glowering at me until I come out. I call them “Devil Eyes.“)

I am no Georgia O’Keeffe, but seeing her ideas creep into my work and creativity is an extraordinary experience. I’m ever grateful for the chance to try and do it.  She helped awaken the hiding artist in me.

I rarely looked at flowers in one piece or any other traditional way. They also have to be original to me. And I present their hearts on a bigger scale.

O’Keeffe’s idea was to go inside the flower, choose one part, and magnify it in her paintings and pictures. The color could accompany it or be mixed with other colors to bring different flowers together.

Since people had not seen flower photos presented in that way, they began to look again.

So she kept painting the sense of it – the inside and soul, if you will – of the flower; suddenly, it was different.

Good advice; it is what I am learning how to do. On my end, it is mesmerizing and compelling. According to the messages I get from readers, flower lovers are paying attention. I can’t take any credit; it wasn’t my idea. But I am slowly and carefully exposing different versions of her idea to present flower photos differently. Day by day, I’m putting my stamp on that, which is both scary and exciting.

 

 

I know I can not paint a flower,” O’Keefe said. “I can not paint the sun on the desert on a bright summer morning, but maybe in terms of paint color, I can convey to you my experience of the flower or the experience that makes the flower significant to me at that particular time.”

That’s the idea. I look for the spirit of the flower and try to convey the experience.

I call it Abstract Flower Art, art that goes deep inside and is colorful and different, almost like a photo painting. Thanks for coming along on the ride and supporting me. I hope it deepens, and I keep learning how to capture the heart of flowers differently and hopefully beautifully.

 

 

 

 

 

7 Comments

  1. the scope of your flower photos is ever evolving, Jon…..and I am loving and enjoying this journey that I feel I am sharing with you……. or that you are sharing with me! Or I am growing more (never a bad thing) because I can *see* things in a new way. It never gets old……it’s something challenging every day! Thank you!!!!!!!!!!!
    Susan M

  2. Every day I want to touch your flowers as if I were touching fabric. Each one looks like rich satin, velvet or silk . The color and light always catch my breath . You have made me appreciate flowers in a much deeper way. Thank you for your passion, Jon.

  3. Daffodils in our side gardens. subtle different shades of yellow.
    Even on overcast days they are like a spot of sunshine. On sunny days they almost glow with the richness of color. In the afternoon when the sunlight hits them just right they seem lit up from within. Each time I look out the window my heart smiles. I bring a few into the house for their scent. After about 3 days I remove the water. Before placing them back into the vase now empty of water I cut the stems so the flower heads are just above the lip of the vase so they don’t drop while drying. When dried they have kept their color with very little fading. They become like paper flowers still bringing sunshine and a smile to my spirit. I have done this for several years now. Saw a couple of dandelions today, love the deep richness of their yellow color. Where once they sprouted up everywhere in abdunce now they have become few in number. Sadness me. Are there to be no more small jars full of them, often brought in as a gift from a young child.
    Jon, I am esp. loving your flower photographs. For many reasons but also because through your eyes I can see the beauty that because of failing eyesight I can no longer use my camera to see the world through. Your videos and photos that you and Maria post are a place of sanuaity, joy, peacefulness, and sanity to my mind and heart.♥️

    1. Thanks Alexa, that is a beautiful message and I deeply appreciate it.. jon what a lift that gives me and thanks for telling me this..I’ll devote my flowers today to you…

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