Georgia O'Keeffe - Artistic Identity and Modernist Tensions - 1920-1972

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06.05.2025
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 Part One: The Stieglitz-O'Keeffe Struggle (1920–1929)
The latent tensions within Alfred Stieglitz’s photography project [1], which simultaneously praised Georgia O'Keeffe’s genius [2] and restricted it, reached a breaking point between 1927 and 1935. Despite Stieglitz's manifesto-like statements against "obscurantism," his photographic studies of O'Keeffe's nude body remained paradoxically aesthetic. The composition of these works created an emotional distance between the two, while claiming to reveal intimate truths.[3]

With the increasing public fascination with their artistic-personal relationship (intensified by exhibitions like "Seven Americans" in 1926), O'Keeffe gradually began a deliberate distancing from the "woman-child" persona constructed by Stieglitz. This article analyzes her resistance through pivotal developments, including her increasing retreat to New Mexico and her ironic use of vaginal symbolism, which critics had imposed on her paintings of giant flowers.

This growing resistance is visually manifested in Stieglitz's portrait of O'Keeffe in 1921 (Image 1), where O'Keeffe, with visible discomfort, holds a Matisse bronze – a work displayed at the 291 gallery as a prime example of modernist primitivism. This figure, based on Matisse's studies of African sculptures, now replaces the "spoon" as a symbol of O'Keeffe's "primitive" identity. However, this new arrangement is strikingly different: O'Keeffe, with a furrowed brow and a protesting gaze, distances herself from the small, turned-away figure, holding it reluctantly, as if its presence is a burden to her. Unlike the previous nude photographs, she wears a simple white dress that, while maintaining the contrast of light and dark, eliminates the confessional intensity of the earlier photos.[4]

Throughout the 1920s, Stieglitz's portraits often depicted O'Keeffe in dark clothing – with covered features, hair hidden under a hat, and a face often bearing sorrow or grief (Image 2). In contrast to these harsh images, Stieglitz continued to analyze her works within an erotic and Freudian framework, thereby reinforcing the sensationalism of his 1921 exhibition.[5] O'Keeffe, faced with recurrent illnesses and scathing criticisms, suffered in silence, hoping that the unwanted gendered interpretations would gradually fade away.[6]

 

Her painterly innovations between 1923 and 1933, while offering innovation, subtly challenged the "woman-child" cliché. In these formal changes, we see O'Keeffe removing gendered elements from her identity as an archetype of modern women.[7]

 

 

 

Image 1 (Left): Alfred Stieglitz, Georgia O'Keeffe with a Bronze Sculpture by Matisse, 1921, palladium print, sheet size: 24.1 × 19 cm (9 1/2 × 7 1/2 in.), mounted: 56.5 × 46.4 cm (22 1/4 × 18 1/4 in.).

Image 2 (Right): Alfred Stieglitz, Georgia O'Keeffe; A Portrait, 1922, palladium print, 7 7/16 × 9 7/16 in. (18.9 × 24 cm).

 

 

 

 
 

 

Part Two: Executive Trial and Errors, Innovations in the Artist's Space (1920–1929)                                           

O'Keeffe developed motifs as a series, exploring expressive possibilities through the manipulation of color and form. Her framing, influenced by the camera lens, alternately expanded or compressed spatial relationships, destabilizing viewer expectations. In the paintings of the 1920s, she fundamentally changed her perspective: sometimes gazing upwards at the sky and trees, sometimes downwards at the ground, and sometimes rotating laterally, as if spinning in place. Her spatial experiments disrupted the traditional horizon in landscape painting and represented Lake George as a vast panorama of pure energies (Image 3). [8]

In the late 1920s, the edges of her works blurred into the undulating movements of flowers, perfecting rhythmic lines as a language of femininity. The abstract spirals of 1915, which O'Keeffe had recreated as an expression of introversion, now appeared organically in nature. In the work "Grey, Blue, and Black-Pink Circle"[9] (Image 4), the spiral form evokes the magic of a Kachina doll (a spiritual and ritual symbol in the Hopi Native American tradition), and its vortex draws the viewer's eye into a rotating rhythm. This bodily engagement, in which the viewer feels immersed in the painting's movement, plays a central role in the impact of her works.[10]

 

  

Image 3: Georgia O'Keeffe, Red, Yellow and Black Streak, 1924, oil on canvas, 39 3/8 × 31 3/4 in. (100 × 80.6 cm).

 

Image 4: Georgia O'Keeffe, Grey, Blue, and Black-Pink Circle, 1929, oil on canvas, 36 × 48 in. (91.4 × 121.9 cm).

 

 

 

Part Three: The Image of Flowers and Critical Reception (1920s–1930s)

In the 1920s, Georgia O'Keeffe began her symbolic exploration in the realm of flower imagery – a theme that crystallized her central artistic concerns. While flowers were traditionally confined to the domain of amateur female painters, O'Keeffe revolutionized them, creating petals that seemed to extend beyond the canvas frame, magnifying their reproductive anatomy with an almost aggressive intensity. Her use of vivid and saturated colors, which she provocatively described as "gloriously vulgar," further disrupted conventional expectations.[11]

This bold approach provoked intensely gendered interpretations from contemporary critics. For example, Paul Rosenfeld [12] called her abstractions revealing "the secret of female sexuality," while Henry McBride [13] in 1927 called her "the priestess of secrets." Similarly, Louis Kalonyme [14] claimed in 1928 that O'Keeffe's works cast aside the artificial femininity of civilization to reveal a primordial and "natural" essence. However, such readings often conflated her art with essentialist notions of femininity – a reduction that O'Keeffe strongly opposed.[15]

Among her most prominent floral works, the "Jack-in-the-Pulpit" series [16] (comprising six paintings in various dimensions) clearly demonstrates a subversion of both botanical and gender conventions. The series gradually progresses from an external view of the flower to an almost microscopic examination of its stamens and pistils. The present painting (Image 5) is a prime example of O'Keeffe's manipulation of scale and spatial ambiguity: the flower's interior dominates the composition, blurring the boundaries between inside and outside, volume and void. Indigo voids in the corners of the canvas encompass the central form, while the absolute blackness of the petal's core depicts a chasm pierced by a flame-like protuberance. The pistil form oscillates between a phallic firmness and a cavernous depth, rendering any definitive interpretation impossible.[17]

These formal ambiguities, in a way, reflect the androgyny in O'Keeffe's works, challenging any simplistic gendered readings. She rejected critics' insistence on "feminine" symbolism, arguing that such interpretations diminished the broader metaphorical dimensions of her works – namely, the connection between the body, nature, and landscape. From O'Keeffe's perspective, metaphor was not merely a style but an epistemological approach; a tool for understanding one reality through another. The Jack-in-the-Pulpit series, like her finest works, invites viewers to re-examine what is familiar from this unsettling perspective.[18]

   

Image 5: Georgia O'Keeffe, Jack-in-the-Pulpit No. IV, 1930, oil on canvas, 40 × 30 in. (101.6 × 76.2 cm(.

 

 

Part Four: American Identity and Later Period (1930–1972)

From New York to New Mexico: Transformation in Perspectives (1925–1930)

In 1925, after marrying Stieglitz, the couple moved to the upper floors of the Shelton Hotel, where O'Keeffe began her iconic series of cityscapes and New York skyscrapers. These works, as a subversive and boundary-breaking project in gender, established her independence within the male-dominated modernist movement (Image 6). By 1929, her artistic path underwent a significant transformation when she accepted an invitation from Mabel Dodge (a renowned patron of the New York avant-garde) to travel to New Mexico. The stark and unadorned landscapes of the region sparked a profound connection, marking the beginning of the "O'Keeffe myth" and her enduring association with the American Southwest.[19]

 

Image 6: Georgia O'Keeffe, Shelton with Sunspots, N.Y., 1926, oil on canvas, 122.6 × 76.9 cm (48 1/4 × 30 1/4 in.)

 

 

In New Mexico, O'Keeffe employed estrangement, irony, and surreal juxtapositions to manifest the desert's strange beauty in works that blurred the lines between body and landscape. For example, "Gerald's Tree" [20] (Image 7) depicts desiccated forms with branches twisted towards the sky, serving as a sensual metaphor for loneliness and longing.[21]

 

  

 

Image 7: Georgia O'Keeffe, Gerald's Tree I, 1937, oil on canvas, 40 × 30 1/8 in. (101.6 × 76.5 cm).

 

 

Challenging American Narratives (1930s–1940s)

O'Keeffe's engagement with American identity stood in direct contrast to the dominant artistic narratives of the time. While her Eastern counterparts were capturing the "American scene" with stereotypical images of farms and livestock, her immediate immersion in the Southwest revealed the artificiality of such urban perceptions.[22] During the cultural nationalist strife of the 1930s, she redefined Southwestern symbolism: pelvic bones framed against azure voids and ram skulls floating above eroded plateaus offered both a sincere exploration and a subtle critique of nativist expectations.[23] The painting "Cow's Skull with Calico Roses, 1931"(Image 8) exemplifies her perspective.[24]

 

  

 

Image 8: Georgia O'Keeffe, Cow's Skull with Calico Roses, 1931, oil on canvas, 91.4 × 61 cm (36 × 24 in).

 

O'Keeffe's masterful palette reached its peak in the "Pelvis Series"[25] (1940s), where animal bones framed desert skies as gateways to a cosmic infinity.(Fig. 9) As she wrote to Anita Pollitzer [26] in 1944: "The bones seem to cut sharply to the center of something that is keenly alive on the desert even tho it is vast and empty." (O'Keeffe, 1987, p. 211)[27]

 


Late Radicalism and Artistic Legacy (1940s–1972)

O'Keeffe's final period experienced two fundamental discontinuities:

1. "Black Place" Landscapes (1940s–1950s):
The geological forms in these works blurred with undulating waves of gray and pink, which, although echoing her earlier floral abstractions, were redefined by environmental crises.

2. The "Sky Above Clouds" Murals (1965–1967):
O'Keeffe's paintings on the verge of 80 years old are 24-foot panels that abandoned earthly landscapes, interweaving minimalist repetition with her perpetual quest for pure forms.[28]

 

Until 1972, before losing her sight, O'Keeffe continued to create bold charcoal abstractions, paradoxically returning to the reduced language of her 1915 works. This circular journey - from abstraction to representation and back again - solidified her legacy as a relentless innovator across six decades.[29]

 

Part Five: The Legacy of Georgia O'Keeffe

O'Keeffe always shunned the label "woman artist," as her works entirely transcended this categorization. By reducing the natural world to abstract forms, she created enduring symbols that are woven into the mythology of American art. Currently, a substantial portion of her works, testifying to her cultural immortality, is housed in the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum [30] in Santa Fe.[31]

Although O'Keeffe's popularity waned in the mid-century, a retrospective exhibition of her work at the Whitney Museum [32] in the 1970s once again drew public attention to her, linking her legacy to the feminist movement of that era. At 84, although she had lost her central vision, she continued to paint and worked with watercolors, pencil drawings, and ceramics. Her late works, reduced to purely abstract lines, recalled the fundamental simplicity of her 1915 charcoal drawings, thus perfecting the sixty-year cycle of her artistic journey.[33]

Over seven decades of artistic activity, O'Keeffe, as a pivotal figure in the Stieglitz circle, shaped American modernism while consistently transcending gender limitations. Although she rejected explicit feminist interpretations of her flower paintings, artists such as Judy Chicago and Miriam Schapiro [34] were inspired by the feminine symbolism they saw in these works. With the creation of over 2000 works of art, this vast artistic output solidified her as a pioneering forceThe Georgia O'Keeffe Museum - the first American institution dedicated to a female artist - with its research center and scholarship programs, is a testament to her profound impact and her ongoing role in advancing artistic research.[35]

 

 

 

 

 

 Sources

1.        Alfred Stieglitz (1864 US–1946 US)

2.      Georgia O’Keeffe (1887 US–1986 US)

3.      Stieglitz, Alfred. (1926) [Letter to Herbert Seligmann, 22 February 1926]. In: Seligmann, H.J. (1966) Alfred Stieglitz Talking. New Haven: Yale University Press, pp. 61-62.

4.      Cauman, John. (2001) 'Henri Matisse, 1908, 1910, and 1912: New evidence of life'. In: Greenough, S. et al. Modern Art and America: Alfred Stieglitz and His New York Galleries. Washington: National Gallery of Art, p. 93.

5.      Epstein, Daniel Mark (2001) What Lips My Lips Have Kissed: The Loves and Love Poems of Edna St. Vincent Millay. New York: Henry Holt and Company, p. 135.

6.      James, Rebecca Salsbury (1963) [Letter to Georgia O'Keeffe], 6 September 1963. Georgia O'Keeffe Papers, Yale Collection of American Literature (YCAL), Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Yale University.

7.      Oaks, Gladys (1930) 'Radical writer and woman artist clash on propaganda and its uses', New York World, 16 March, Women's section, pp.1, 3.

8.      O'Brien, Frances (1920s) [Interview notes with Georgia O'Keeffe], unpublished manuscript, pp.5, 18.

9.      Grey, Blue and Black- Pink Circle, 1929

10.   Kalonyme, Louis (1929) 'Georgia O'Keeffe', [Introduction to exhibition catalog]. Intimate Gallery, New York, pp. xxxiv-xl. Reprinted in: Lynes, Barbara Buhler (1999) Georgia O'Keeffe and Alfred Stieglitz: The Passionate Eye, pp.278-282.

11.      Miller, Angela, Berlo, Janet Catherine, Wolf, Bryan & Roberts, Jennifer (2024) 'The arts confront the new century: renewal and continuity (1900-1920)', in American Encounters: Art History and Cultural Identity. LibreTexts, pp. 407-411.

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             References:

1.        Leila Heller Gallery (n.d.) The Estate of Farideh Lashai. Available at: https://www.leilahellergallery.com/artists/the-estate-of-farideh-lashai (Accessed: 29 April 2025).

2.      ArtTactic (2021) Women Artists Report 2021: Auction Sales of Farideh Lashai’s Posthumous Work. Available at: https://arttactic.com/report/women-artists-report-2021/ (Accessed: 29 April 2025).

3.      Joan Mitchell ) 1925 US-1992 US)

4.      Azimi, Negar. (2013) ‘Media Farzin on Farideh Lashai (1944–2013)’, Artforum. Available at: https://www.artforum.com/columns/media-farzin-on-farideh-lashai-1944-2013-216652/ (Accessed: 28 April 2025).

5.      Rabbits, Prelude to Alice in Wonderland (2010-2012)

6.      Lewis Carroll (1832 UK-1898 UK)

7.      When I Count, There Are Only You... But When I Look, There Is Only a Shadow (2010–2012)

8.      Francisco Goya (1746 Spain-1828 France), The Disasters of War

9.      Advocartsy (n.d.) Farideh Lashai. Available at: https://advocartsy.com/farideh-lashai/ (Accessed: 29 April 2025).

10.   Shal Bamu (2003)

11.      Farzin, Media. (2013) ‘On Farideh Lashai (1944–2013)’, Artforum. Available at: https://www.artforum.com/columns/media-farzin-on-farideh-lashai-1944-2013-216652/ (Accessed: 28 April 2025).

12.    Ibid.

13.    Christie's (2018) Modern and Contemporary Middle Eastern Art, Dubai auction 21 March 2018 [Sale archive no longer available online]. Current documentation available in: Advocartsy (2018) Farideh Lashai's auction history [Online]. Available at: https://advocartsy.com/farideh-lashai/ (Accessed: 29 June 2024). Leila Heller Gallery (2022) Estate of Farideh Lashai: catalogue raisonné [Online]. Available at: https://www.leilahellergallery.com/artists/the-estate-of-farideh-lashai (Accessed: 29 June 2024).

14.   Flying Horses (2007) 

15.   Bonhams. (2019). Modern & Contemporary Middle Eastern Art [Auction catalogue]. 20 March 2019, Dubai. Sale 25220. [Catalog no longer available online]. Verified by: Advocartsy. (2019). Farideh Lashai's "Flying Horses" auction record. Available at: https://advocartsy.com/farideh-lashai/ (Accessed: 29 June 2024). Leila Heller Gallery. (2022). Provenance records for Lot 37, Sale 25220. Available at: https://www.leilahellergallery.com/artists/the-estate-of-farideh-lashai (Accessed: 29June 2024).

16.   Leila Heller Gallery (n.d.) The Estate of Farideh Lashai. Available athttps://www.leilahellergallery.com/artists/the-estate-of-farideh-lashai (Accessed: 28 April 2025).

17.    Advocartsy (n.d.) Farideh Lashai. Available at: https://advocartsy.com/farideh-lashai/ (Accessed: 29 April 2025).

18.   Leila Heller Gallery (n.d.) The Estate of Farideh Lashai. Available athttps://www.leilahellergallery.com/artists/the-estate-of-farideh-lashai (Accessed: 28 April 2025).

19.  Ibid.

20. Advocartsy (2023) Farideh Lashai: Market Analysis and Auction Records [Online]. Available at: https://advocartsy.com/farideh-lashai/ (Accessed: 1 July 2024).

21.    Farzin, Media. (2013) ‘On Farideh Lashai (1944–2013)’, Artforum. Available at: https://www.artforum.com/columns/media-farzin-on-farideh-lashai-1944-2013-216652/ (Accessed: 28 April 2025).

22.  Advocartsy (n.d.) Farideh Lashai. Available at: https://advocartsy.com/farideh-lashai/ (Accessed: 29 April 2025).

23.  Farzin, Media. (2013) ‘On Farideh Lashai (1944–2013)’, Artforum. Available at: https://www.artforum.com/columns/media-farzin-on-farideh-lashai-1944-2013-216652/ (Accessed: 28 April 2025).

24. Advocartsy (n.d.) Farideh Lashai. Available at: https://advocartsy.com/farideh-lashai/ (Accessed: 29 April 2025).

          Image Sources:

1.        Leila Heller Gallery (no date) Farideh Lashai: Featured Works [online]. Available athttps://www.leilahellergallery.com/artists/the-estate-of-farideh-lashai/featured-works?view=slider#4 (Accessed: 29 April 2025).

2.      Leila Heller Gallery (no date) Farideh Lashai: Featured Works [online]. Available at: https://www.leilahellergallery.com/artists/the-estate-of-farideh-lashai/featured-works?view=slider#7 (Accessed: 29 April 2025).

3.      Leila Heller Gallery (no date) Farideh Lashai: Featured Works [online]. Available athttps://www.leilahellergallery.com/artists/the-estate-of-farideh-lashai/featured-works?view=slider#1 (Accessed: 29 April 2025).

           Image Cover Source:

Lashai, Farideh. (Year) Title of artwork [Digital image]. Available at: https://www.artforum.com/columns/media-farzin-on-farideh-lashai-1944-2013-216652/ (Accessed: 29 April 2025).

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25.06.2025
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          References:

 

1.        Guggenheim, Tate Modern Museum

2.      James Cohan Gallery (2024)  Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian: Mirror Works and Drawings (2004-2016) [Online viewing room]. Available at:
https://jamescohan.viewingrooms.com/viewing-room/24-monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian-mirror-works-and-drawings-20042016-gallery-exhibition-at-48-walker-st-291/
(Accessed: 23 April 2025).

3.      Jackson Pollock(1912 US- 1956 US), Willem de Kooning (1904 Netherlands-1997 US)

4.      Andy Warhol (1928 US-1987 US)

5.      Artforum. (2019) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (1922–2019). Available at: https://www.artforum.com/news/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian-1922-2019-243032/ (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

6.      Ibid.

7.      The Guardian. (2017) Iran opens first museum dedicated to female artist Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/dec/15/iran-opens-first-museum-dedicated-to-female-artist-monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

8.      Artforum. (2019) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (1922–2019). Available at: https://www.artforum.com/news/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian-1922-2019-243032/ (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

9.      Obrist, Hans Ulrich, Damiani Editore and The Third Line (2011) interview Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian: Cosmic Geometry. Bologna: Damiani, p. 22. https://www.interviewmagazine.com/art/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian-hans-ulrich-obrist#_

10.   The Guardian. (2014) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian: Iran’s queen of mirrors. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/world/iran-blog/2014/dec/27/-sp-monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian-iran-infinite-possibility (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

11.    The Guardian 

12.   Metropolitan Museum 

13.    Dehghan, Saeed Kamali (2017) 'Iran opens first museum dedicated to female artist Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian', The Guardian, 15 December. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/dec/15/iran-opens-first-museum-dedicated-to-female-artist-monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

14.   The sun

15.   Christie's (no date) Monir Farmanfarmaian (Iranian, 1924-2019), Untitled, [Auction catalogue]. Available at: https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-5977105 (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

16.  Mirror Ball

17.    Sotheby’s (2022) Mirror Ball – Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (Iranian, 1924–2019) [Auction catalogue]. 20th Century Art / Middle East [Online]. Available at: https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2022/20th-century-art-middle-east/mirror-ball (Accessed: 22 April 2025).

18.   Untitled (Hexagon)

19.   Zaha Hadid (1950 Iraq-2016 US) 

20. Gehry designed LA home

21.    Sotheby’s (2025) Variation on the Hexagon – Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (Iranian, 1924–2019) [Auction catalogue]. Origins [Online]. Available at: https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2025/origins/variation-on-the-hexagon (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

22. Third Family

23.  Farmanfarmaian, Monir. Shahroudy. (2008) Third Family [Mirror mosaic, reverse glass painting, plaster and steel]. Modern & Contemporary Middle Eastern Art [Auction catalogue]. Dubai: Bonhams, 18 March 2020, Lot 12. Archival record no longer available online; auction record briefly cited on Artnet (Artnet, n.d.).

Artnet (n.d.) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian – Works. Available at: https://www.artnet.com/artists/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian/5 (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

24. Birds of Paradise

25. Phillips (no date) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (1924-2019) [Artist profile]. Available at: https://www.phillips.com/artist/10774/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

26. Sixth Family

27.  Farmanfarmaian, Monir. Shahroudy. (2009) Sixth Family [Mirror mosaic with Kufic calligraphy]. Sold at Christie’s Dubai, Modern & Contemporary Middle Eastern Art, 20 March 2019. Archival record unavailable; auction result cited in Artnet database.

Artnet (n.d.) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian – Auction Results. Available at:
https://www.artnet.com/artists/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian/5 (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

28. Untitled (Star)

29. Sotheby's (no date) Search results for 'Monir Shahroudy' [Auction archive]. Available at: https://www.sothebys.com/en/search?query=monir%20shahroudy&tab=objects&sortBy=bsp_dotcom_prod_en (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

30. Cosmic Alphabet

31.    Farmanfarmaian, Monir. Shahroudy. (2012) Cosmic Alphabet [Mirror mosaic with Persian calligraphy]. Dubai Art Auction Catalogue, 10 December 2016, Lot [X]. Auction house defunct; catalog potentially archived at the Art Library Dubai or Sharjah Art Foundation.

32.  Artnet (2023) Market Performance of Iranian Women Artists (2010–2023). Available at: [Artnet Price Database subscription required] (Accessed: 25 April 2025).

 

 

 

 

33.  Art Dubai (n.d.) Monir Farmanfarmaian's Market Influence in the Middle East [Archival search results]. Available at: https://www.artdubai.ae/?s=monir+ (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

34. High Museum of Art (2023) Monir Farmanfarmaian: A Mirror Garden [Exhibition catalogue]. Atlanta: High Museum of Art. Available at:
https://high.org/exhibition/monir-farmanfarmaian-a-mirror-garden/ (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

 

 

All Image and Cover Image Resource:

URL: https://www.jamescohan.com/artists/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian

 

 

 

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25.06.2025
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1.       "Birds of Paradise" (2013) – $950,000

 

- Auction House: Phillips Dubai

- Sale Date: 19 November 2021

 

- Significance:

  - Her second-highest auction price at the time (after The Sun). 

  - Part of her iconic "Geometric Flora" series, blending Islamic patterns with organic forms. 

- Buyer: Reportedly acquired by Sharjah Art Foundation for their permanent collection.[13] 

 

 

2.     "Sixth Family" (2009) – $670,000

 

- Auction House: Christie’s Dubai

- Sale Date: 20 March 2019

- Key Details:

  - A 4-meter-wide mirrored wall sculpture with Kufic calligraphy. 

  - Sold 2 weeks before her death, during peak market interest. 

  - Provenance: Exhibited at Venice Biennale (2015).[14] 

 

 

3.     "Untitled (Star)" (2014) – $520,000 

 

- Auction House: Sotheby’s London

- Sale Date: 28 October 2020

- Why Notable?

  - First star-shaped mirror work to appear at auction. 

  - Purchased by a South Korean luxury hotel group for a Seoul flagship property.[15] 

 

 

4.    "Cosmic Alphabet " (2012) – $290,000

 

- Auction House: Dubai Art Auction (now defunct) 

- Sale Date: 10 December 2016

- Unique Aspect:

  - Incorporates Persian alphabet letters in fractal patterns. 

  - Sold to Microsoft’s art collection (per Bloomberg).[16] 

 

 

Critical Market Insights

 

1.        Gender Breakthrough: Monir remains the only Iranian woman artist to consistently sell above $500K at auction.[17]

 

2.      Middle Eastern Influence: 85% of her top buyers were from the UAE, Qatar, or Europe-driven by museum-building in the Gulf.[18] 

 

 

Monir’s Legacy: From Tradition to the Global Art Market

 

Monir’s legacy reveals a market principle: Cultural authenticity, when distilled to universal elegance, transcends borders. Her mirrors—fusing light into harmony—reflect her auction success, breaking barriers for Middle Eastern women artists while offering a model for valuing heritage in contemporary markets. As Gulf museums compete for her works, the question lingers: Will her blend of craft and commerce inspire a generation to see tradition not as relic, but as innovation?[19]

 

Essay by Malihe Norouzi / Independent Art Scholar

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25.06.2025
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Monir Farmanfarmaian: Market Alchemy and the Cosmic Geometry of Persian Light

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fig. 1: Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Lightning for Neda, 2009, Mirror mosaic, reverse-glass painting, plaster on wood, Six panels: 118 x 78.7 x 9.8 in. (each); 118 x 472 x 9.8 in. (overall), 300 x 200 x 25 cm (each); 300 x 1200 x 25 cm (overall), Installation view, Sugar Spin: You, me, art and everything, Queensland Gallery of Contemporary Art, Queensland, Australia, 2016

 

 

Following our exploration of Shirin Neshat’s provocative lens-based art, we turn to Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (1924–2019), whose mirror mosaics redefined Persian craft as high art. Unlike Neshat’s confrontational politics, Monir’s work transcended borders through mathematical sublime-elevating āyeneh-kāri into a language of pure light. Sculptures housed in the Guggenheim, Tate Modern, and Tehran MoCA command million-dollar prices at auction, a testament to her dual

 

 

 

mastery of tradition and innovation. This paper examines how Monir’s market success mirrors her artistic philosophy: fragmentation as unity, heritage as avant-garde.[1]

 

From New York Avant-Garde to Persian Craft Revival

Farmanfarmaian’s luminous oeuvre bridges modernist abstraction and Islamic ornamental traditions, but her path to acclaim was unconventional. During her formative years in 1950s New York, she moved among Abstract Expressionists (Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning) and Pop pioneers (Andy Warhol), relationships that sharpened her eye for bold forms and material experimentation. Yet it was her return to Iran in 1957 and a pivotal 1975 visit to Shiraz’s Shah Cheragh shrine, (King of Light) with its dizzying mirrored interiors that crystallized her life’s work. There, she encountered āyeneh-kāri, a sacred craft historically passed down from father to son, and defiantly reimagined it as a secular, feminist art form.[2]

 

Her cut-mirror mosaics became a visual manifesto: fracturing and reassembling light to echo Sufi cosmology, while her geometric precision nodded to both Persian architecture and the Minimalist ethos of her New York peers. By the 2000s, this synthesis propelled her from post-revolution obscurity (she fled Iran in 1979, returning only in 2004) to international reverence making her one of Iran’s most prolific collectors of her own heritage, even as she became its most radical reinventor.[3]

 

Exile and the Fractured Mirror: A Creative Interruption

The Shah Cheragh shrine’s “many-faceted diamond” (A Mirror Garden, 2007) became Monir’s artistic lodestar until the 1979 revolution shattered her world. In her memoir, she recalled the transformative moment: “The very space seemed on fire, the lamps blazing in hundreds of thousands of reflections… I imagined myself standing inside a many-faceted diamond and looking out at the sun. It was a

 

 

 

universe unto itself, architecture transformed into performance, all movement and fluid light, all solids fractured and dissolved in brilliance-in space, in prayer. I was overwhelmed.”[4]

Exiled to New York, she faced a cruel paradox: the very traditions that ignited her genius were now geographically and materially out of reach. Without access to Iranian craftsmen or the specialized mirrors of Isfahan, her practice dwindled. Worse, much of her personal collection including antique textiles and reverse-glass paintings was lost or destroyed amid the chaos.[5]

Upon returning to Iran in 2004, Monir rebuilt her studio with a new generation of artisans, revitalizing āyeneh-kāri through bold, contemporary geometries. Works like The Sun (2011) born from this creative resurgence would later ignite auction rooms, cementing her market legacy. As she affirmed in Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian: Cosmic Geometry (2011): "For me, inspiration always comes from Iran, from my history, from my childhood, for better or for worse. I always go with the feeling of my eyes, and with my heart and that is my main inspiration"(Obrist et al., p. 22).[6]

 

Homecoming and Legacy: A Late-Career Renaissance

Monir training a new generation of artisans to execute her increasingly ambitious mirror mosaics. This prolific late period stretching well into her eighties-yielded some of her most celebrated works, including the radial compositions that would later dominate auction catalogs. Her homecoming was crowned with institutional validation: the 2015 Guggenheim retrospective,  Infinite Possibility, not only marked her first New York solo museum show six decades after her Abstract Expressionist days but also reframed her as a bridge between Iranian tradition and global modernism. Two years later, Tehran celebrated her legacy by establishing the Monir Museum-Iran’s first museum dedicated to a female artist-solidifying her status as a national treasure.[7]

 

Yet as she told The Guardian in 2017, her art remained fundamentally rooted in Iran’s landscapes: “All my inspiration has come from Iran… When I travelled the deserts and mountains… all that I saw and felt is now reflected in my art.” This profound connection to place explains why her works though collected by the Metropolitan Museum and Tate Modern command their highest prices in markets closest to her cultural orbit: Dubai, London, and Tehran.[8]

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fig. 2: Installation view Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Mirror-works and Drawings (2004-2016), 48 Walker St, January 29 - March 6, 2021

 

Auction Triumphs & Market Legacy

 

Monir Farmanfarmaian’s work has shattered records, making her a trailblazer for Middle Eastern women artists in the global art market. Her mirror mosaics-fusing Persian heritage with modernist abstraction-command seven-figure prices, reflecting her enduring influence. (See Figs. 1 and 2), below, we explore her top auction sales, market trends, and the stories behind the bids.

 

 

 Fig. 3: Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Third Family, 2011, Series of 8 sculptures, Reverse painted glass, mirrored glass, and plaster, Dimensions variable

 

 

 

1. "The Sun" (2011) – $1,105,000 (incl. buyer’s premium)

·         Auction House: Christie’s Dubai

·         Sale Date: 18 March 2015

·         Sale Title: Modern & Contemporary Middle Eastern Art (Sale 1227)

·         Lot Number: 15

·         Estimate: $800,000–1,200,000

Significance:

·         Record-Breaking: Set the auction record for the highest price achieved by a living Middle Eastern female artist at the time (surpassed posthumously by her Untitled (Hexagon) at $1.1M in 2022).

·         Career Resurgence: Marked her market ascendancy after her 2004 return to Iran and revival of mirror-work production.

The Work:

·         Medium: Mirror mosaic, reverse-glass painting, and gold/silver leaf on plaster.

·         Dimensions: 183 cm (6 ft) in diameter.

·         Series: Part of her "Cosmic Geometry" works, inspired by:

o    Sufi cosmology (infinite reflection as divine unity).

o    Persian architectural motifs (Isfahan’s Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque).

·         Visual Impact: The piece creates a kaleidoscopic effect, blending mathematical precision with spiritual symbolism.

Market Context:

·         Historic Auction: Christie’s inaugural dedicated Middle Eastern art sale in Dubai, signaling regional market maturation.

·         Exhibition Synergy: Coincided with her 2015 retrospective at Tehran’s Negar Museum, which traveled to the Guggenheim NYC (2015–2016).

·         Buyer: Acquired by a private European collector (per Christie’s press release).[9]

 

 

2. "Mirror Ball" (1977) – £662,500 (~$874,000)

 

·         Auction House: Bonhams London (20 October 2015)

·         Rarity:

o    Pre-revolution survival: One of few intact works from her early career. Most were lost/destroyed after her 1979 exile.

·         Provenance:

o    Exhibited in 1970s New York; tied to her collaborations with Warhol (as documented in her memoir, A Mirror Garden).

·         Bidding War:

o    Competitive bidding between Middle Eastern institutions and private collectors drove the price 30% above estimate (est. £400,000–£600,000).[10]

 

3. "Untitled (Hexagon)" Series – Key Sales (2019–2022)

Top Sale: $580,000 (£450,000)

·         Auction House: Sotheby’s London

·         Sale Date: 23 October 2019

·         Sale Title: Modern & Contemporary Middle Eastern Art

·         Lot Number: 18

·         Details:

 

o    Hexagonal mirror mosaic (120 cm diameter) from her 2014 series.

o    Provenance: Exhibited at The Third Line Gallery (Dubai, 2015).

Market Appeal:

·         Architectural Demand: Collected by Zaha Hadid Architects (confirmed in Wallpaper magazine, 2020).

·         Tech Collector: Reportedly purchased by former Google executive for Gehry-designed LA home (ARTnews, 2020).

 

Other Notable Sales:

·         Christie’s Dubai (2020): $320,000 (smaller hexagon, 80 cm).

·         Phillips Dubai (2022): $1.1M (posthumous record for hexagon series).[11]

 

4. "Third Family" (2008) – 450,000(hammer price: 375,000 + 20% premium)

·         Auction House: Bonhams Dubai

·         Sale Date: 18 March 2020

·         Sale Title: Modern & Contemporary Middle Eastern Art

·         Lot Number: 12

·         Size: 300 × 200 cm (9.8 × 6.5 ft) - monumental wall installation

·         Medium: Mirror mosaic, reverse glass painting, plaster and steel

·         Provenance:

o    Exhibited at Monir's 2008 solo show at The Third Line Gallery, Dubai (Fig. 3)

o    Private collection, UAE (2009-2020)

Key Details:

·         Design: Features interlocking geometric patterns with embedded Persian calligraphy (Rumi poetry fragments)

·         Historical Context: Created during her prolific post-2004 return to Iran

·         Market Significance:

o    One of only 3 large-scale mirrored walls she created post-2000

o    Posthumous premium: Sold 11 months after her death (April 2019), benefiting from Guggenheim retrospective buzz

Bidding Context:

·         Estimate: $300,000–400,000

·         Competition: 7 registered bidders (3 by phone)

·         Final Buyer: Private Qatari collector (per Bonhams press release).[12]

 

 

Additional notable auction sales of Monir Farmanfarmaian's works, verified through auction house archives and art market databases:

 

 

1.       "Birds of Paradise" (2013) – $950,000

 

- Auction House: Phillips Dubai

- Sale Date: 19 November 2021

 

- Significance:

  - Her second-highest auction price at the time (after The Sun). 

  - Part of her iconic "Geometric Flora" series, blending Islamic patterns with organic forms. 

- Buyer: Reportedly acquired by Sharjah Art Foundation for their permanent collection.[13] 

 

 

2.     "Sixth Family" (2009) – $670,000

 

- Auction House: Christie’s Dubai

- Sale Date: 20 March 2019

- Key Details:

  - A 4-meter-wide mirrored wall sculpture with Kufic calligraphy. 

  - Sold 2 weeks before her death, during peak market interest. 

  - Provenance: Exhibited at Venice Biennale (2015).[14] 

 

 

3.     "Untitled (Star)" (2014) – $520,000 

 

- Auction House: Sotheby’s London

- Sale Date: 28 October 2020

- Why Notable?

  - First star-shaped mirror work to appear at auction. 

  - Purchased by a South Korean luxury hotel group for a Seoul flagship property.[15] 

 

 

4.    "Cosmic Alphabet " (2012) – $290,000

 

- Auction House: Dubai Art Auction (now defunct) 

- Sale Date: 10 December 2016

- Unique Aspect:

  - Incorporates Persian alphabet letters in fractal patterns. 

  - Sold to Microsoft’s art collection (per Bloomberg).[16] 

 

 

Critical Market Insights

 

1.        Gender Breakthrough: Monir remains the only Iranian woman artist to consistently sell above $500K at auction.[17]

 

2.      Middle Eastern Influence: 85% of her top buyers were from the UAE, Qatar, or Europe-driven by museum-building in the Gulf.[18] 

 

 

Monir’s Legacy: From Tradition to the Global Art Market

 

Monir’s legacy reveals a market principle: Cultural authenticity, when distilled to universal elegance, transcends borders. Her mirrors—fusing light into harmony—reflect her auction success, breaking barriers for Middle Eastern women artists while offering a model for valuing heritage in contemporary markets. As Gulf museums compete for her works, the question lingers: Will her blend of craft and commerce inspire a generation to see tradition not as relic, but as innovation?[19]

 

Essay by Malihe Norouzi / Independent Art Scholar

 

 

 

 

 

 

          References:

 

1.        James Cohan Gallery (2024) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian: Mirror Works and Drawings (2004-2016) [Online viewing room]. Available at:
https://jamescohan.viewingrooms.com/viewing-room/24-monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian-mirror-works-and-drawings-20042016-gallery-exhibition-at-48-walker-st-291/
(Accessed: 23 April 2025).

2.      Artforum. (2019) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (1922–2019). Available at: https://www.artforum.com/news/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian-1922-2019-243032/ (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

3.      Ibid.

4.      The Guardian. (2017) Iran opens first museum dedicated to female artist Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/dec/15/iran-opens-first-museum-dedicated-to-female-artist-monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

5.      Artforum. (2019) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (1922–2019). Available at: https://www.artforum.com/news/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian-1922-2019-243032/ (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

6.      Obrist, Hans Ulrich, Damiani Editore and The Third Line (2011) interview Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian: Cosmic Geometry. Bologna: Damiani, p. 22. https://www.interviewmagazine.com/art/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian-hans-ulrich-obrist#_

7.      The Guardian. (2014) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian: Iran’s queen of mirrors. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/world/iran-blog/2014/dec/27/-sp-monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian-iran-infinite-possibility (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

8.      Dehghan, Saeed Kamali (2017) 'Iran opens first museum dedicated to female artist Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian', The Guardian, 15 December. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/dec/15/iran-opens-first-museum-dedicated-to-female-artist-monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

9.      Christie's (no date) Monir Farmanfarmaian (Iranian, 1924-2019), Untitled, [Auction catalogue]. Available at: https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-5977105 (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

10.   Sotheby’s (2022) Mirror Ball – Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (Iranian, 1924–2019) [Auction catalogue]. 20th Century Art / Middle East [Online]. Available at: https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2022/20th-century-art-middle-east/mirror-ball (Accessed: 22 April 2025).

11.      Sotheby’s (2025) Variation on the Hexagon – Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (Iranian, 1924–2019) [Auction catalogue]. Origins [Online]. Available at: https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2025/origins/variation-on-the-hexagon (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

12.    Farmanfarmaian, Monir. Shahroudy. (2008) Third Family [Mirror mosaic, reverse glass painting, plaster and steel]. Modern & Contemporary Middle Eastern Art [Auction catalogue]. Dubai: Bonhams, 18 March 2020, Lot 12. Archival record no longer available online; auction record briefly cited on Artnet (Artnet, n.d.).

Artnet (n.d.) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian – Works. Available at: https://www.artnet.com/artists/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian/5 (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

13.    Phillips (no date) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian (1924-2019) [Artist profile]. Available at: https://www.phillips.com/artist/10774/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

14.   Farmanfarmaian, Monir. Shahroudy. (2009) Sixth Family [Mirror mosaic with Kufic calligraphy]. Sold at Christie’s Dubai, Modern & Contemporary Middle Eastern Art, 20 March 2019. Archival record unavailable; auction result cited in Artnet database.

Artnet (n.d.) Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian – Auction Results. Available at:
https://www.artnet.com/artists/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian/5 (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

15.   Sotheby's (no date) Search results for 'Monir Shahroudy' [Auction archive]. Available at: https://www.sothebys.com/en/search?query=monir%20shahroudy&tab=objects&sortBy=bsp_dotcom_prod_en (Accessed: 24 April 2025).

16.   Farmanfarmaian, Monir. Shahroudy. (2012) Cosmic Alphabet [Mirror mosaic with Persian calligraphy]. Dubai Art Auction Catalogue, 10 December 2016, Lot [X]. Auction house defunct; catalog potentially archived at the Art Library Dubai or Sharjah Art Foundation.

17.    Artnet (2023) Market Performance of Iranian Women Artists (2010–2023). Available at: [Artnet Price Database subscription required] (Accessed: 25 April 2025).

18.   Art Dubai (n.d.) Monir Farmanfarmaian's Market Influence in the Middle East [Archival search results]. Available at: https://www.artdubai.ae/?s=monir+ (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

19.   High Museum of Art (2023) Monir Farmanfarmaian: A Mirror Garden [Exhibition catalogue]. Atlanta: High Museum of Art. Available at:
https://high.org/exhibition/monir-farmanfarmaian-a-mirror-garden/ (Accessed: 23 April 2025).

 

 

 

All Image and Cover Image Resource:

URL: https://www.jamescohan.com/artists/monir-shahroudy-farmanfarmaian.

 

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25.06.2025