340 S. Convent Ave
At Etherton Gallery,
Close to the Bone and
O’Keeffe at Home are presented in quiet but potent dialogue, bringing together two artists who faced the subject of aging without sentimentality or retreat. Though working in different media and contexts, Bailey Doogan and
Dan Budnik share a commitment to looking closely at lived experience, allowing time to register on the body and the self without apology or disguise.
Bailey Doogan’s portraits confront viewers with an honesty that remains rare. Long before discussions of body politics entered mainstream discourse, she insisted on representing the aging body as it is lived rather than idealized. Her figures bear the marks of work, illness, sexuality, and endurance, rendered through expressive gesture or stark realism. Whether symbolic or direct, Doogan’s images refuse distance. They invite recognition, asking the viewer to acknowledge aging as a record of experience rather than decline. In this sense, her work feels both deeply personal and unavoidably political.
Across the gallery, Dan Budnik’s photographs of Georgia O’Keeffe offer a different but complementary perspective. Taken in 1975, when O’Keeffe was in her late eighties, these images reveal an artist firmly present in her daily rhythms. Budnik photographs her not as an icon but as a woman at home, attentive to her surroundings, composed yet relaxed. The desert light, domestic spaces, and small gestures convey continuity rather than withdrawal, countering assumptions about creative life in old age.
Budnik’s long career documenting artists, social movements, and American landscapes informs the sensitivity of this series. His camera neither intrudes nor romanticizes. Instead, it registers trust, allowing O’Keeffe’s authority and independence to remain intact. The resulting photographs suggest that age does not diminish agency, but can sharpen it.
Together, these exhibitions form a measured meditation on time, visibility, and dignity. By pairing Doogan’s confrontational portraits with Budnik’s intimate photographs, Etherton Gallery underscores aging as an active state of being. The exhibition stands not only as a reflection on two remarkable practices, but also as a reminder that looking closely—without fear or embellishment—remains one of art’s most enduring responsibilities.
Image:
Georgia O’Keeffe with hands on pot, 1975
gelatin silver print. © Dan Budnik