Georgia O'Keeffe (1887-1986) was an American modernist painter. She's best known for the roughly 200 paintings she did of flowers and other flora, especially those from desert environments.
The most famous critical debate around her flower paintings has been the degree to which they are meant to symbolize female genitalia. Her husband, the famous photographer Alfred Stieglitz, used that Freudian interpretation to promote her paintings; O'Keefe vigorously denied it, leading no doubt to some fiery conversations at home. ("I made you take time to look at what I saw," she said of critics, "and when you took time to really notice my flowers, you hung all your own associations with flowers on my flower and you write about my flower as if I think and see what you think and see of the flower — and I don’t.")
Her parents, Wisconsin dairy farmers, had awesome names — Francis Calyxtus O'Keeffe and Ida Totto O'Keeffe, the Totto (also Georgia's middle name) descending from her father, Hungarian count George Victor Totto.
This embedding is based on 30 images of O'Keeffe's flower paintings, cooked for a total of 300 steps on base SD 1.5: 16 vectors per token, a 0.004 learning rate, a batch size of 6, and 5 gradient steps.
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