On March 26, the Amon Carter Museum will present “Stieglitz and  O’Keeffe at Lake George,” a small exhibition consisting of two  paintings by Georgia O’Keeffe (1887-1986) and nine photographs by  Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946), four of which are recent museum  acquisitions. This exhibition is on view through June 12.  Admission is free.   This installation focuses on a period during the 1920s when these  two towering figures of American art experienced their most  fruitful artistic collaboration. All of the Stieglitz photographs  and O’Keeffe’s “White Birch,” oil on canvas, 1925, are from the  Carter’s permanent collection. O’Keeffe’s “Storm Cloud, Lake  George,” oil on canvas, 1923, is on loan from the Georgia  O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe, N.M.   The visual dialogue created by this group of artworks conveys the  couple’s rich intellectual and emotional partnership. “The  confluence of their personal and professional lives at Lake  George held momentous ramifications for both Stieglitz and  O’Keeffe, resulting in some of their most affecting work,” said  Jane Myers, senior curator of prints and drawings. “Displaying a  few key works by each artist yields surprising and provocative  insights into their artistic temperaments.”   The artists’ common vocabulary was informed by Lake George, a  summer resort nestled in the foothills of New York’s Adirondack  Mountains. Beginning in 1918, at the commencement of their  relationship (they were married in 1924), and concluding in 1929,  when O’Keeffe began spending part of each year in New Mexico, the  couple traveled to Lake George annually to spend the summer and  fall seasons at the Stieglitz family estate. The close  relationship between painter and photographer transformed the  work of both artists as they probed their responses to the  region’s natural beauty. Having already secured his legacy through his promotion ofphotography and European modernism, Stieglitz absorbed O’Keeffe’sdistinctive style, enabling him for the first time to merge his ownphotographic work with innovations of the modernism he championed.Twenty-five years Stieglitz’s junior and just attaining herartistic stride, the more introspective O’Keeffe took from thelanguage of photography such visual aesthetics as framing and depthof field.   Eventually, personal tensions came between the two, but still  their seasons at Lake George were punctuated by extraordinary  glimmers of creative and emotional collaboration.   Public programs include a gallery talk on Thursday, April 21, at  6 pm. “Sharing Eden: Stieglitz and O’Keeffe at Lake George” will  be presented by John Rohrbach, senior curator of photographs, and  Jane Myers, senior curator of prints and drawings. Admission is  free.   Amon Carter Museum is at 3501 Camp Bowie Boulevard. For  information, 817-989-5066 or .          
 
    



 
						