Sunday, November 11, 2007

georgia and eugene


This is a portrait of a young Georgia O'Keeffe, done when she was enrolled at New York's Art Student's League, circa 1908. The painter and Georgia's fellow student was Eugene Speicher, who had asked Georgia repeatedly to pose for him; when she kept refusing he noted that she might as well let him do her portrait since he'd probably become famous while she would just end up teaching art to girls someplace. Georgia took that insult quietly and sat for the picture; she looks really cute at that age and her hair is short and curly because she had recently gotten over a case of typhoid so severe that it caused her normally long straight locks to fall out.

So what became of Eugene Speicher? He was a success, particularly as a portrait artist, but I don't think he was honored with a U.S. postage stamp or made it to the White House to be honored by good old Ronnie Reagan. I wonder how he felt even back in the 1920s when O'Keeffe's floral paintings were fetching huge sums of money. Or whether she made sure to send him invitations to her exhibits, and whether he cared to receive them or not.

But you know, to this day there's always a lot of joking around in college and/or art school betweeen the sexes and maybe Speicher was just teasing Georgia. I like his portrait of her, and apparently he painted it rather fast--maybe because he was already quick and skilled with a brush, or maybe because he sensed Georgia really didn't feel like loitering around playing muse to his artistic presence.