An anatomically correct drawing of an eye by Flannery O’Connor.
A painting by Flannery O’Connor of a barn still at Andalusia, the Milledgeville farm where O’Connor spent her adult life.
One of two paintings of the same church in the exhibit. Curators believe it may be First Presbyterian Church in downtown Milledgeville.
The collection of O’Connor ephemera at the Andalusia Farm interpretative center includes scores of photographs of and by Flannery O’Connor, too.
Portrait of a seated woman, left, and three guinea fowl, right, are among the previously unknown works by author Flannery O’Connor now on display in Milledgeville.
Previously unknown paintings by author Flannery O’Connor now on display in Milledgeville.
Flannery O’Connor drew and painted these faces on little pieces of wood when she was a child.
The collection of O’Connor ephemera at the Andalusia Farm interpretative center includes scores of photographs of and by Flannery O’Connor, too.
The collection of O’Connor ephemera at the Andalusia Farm interpretative center includes scores of photographs of and by Flannery O’Connor, too.
This still standing barn at the Andalusia Farm in Milledgeville was just one subject for the painting of author Flannery O’Connor.
This still standing barn at the Andalusia Farm in Milledgeville was just one subject for the painting of author Flannery O'Connor.
A painting by Flannery O’Connor of a barn still at Andalusia, the Milledgeville farm where O’Connor spent her adult life.
A painting by Flannery O’Connor of a barn still at Andalusia, the Milledgeville farm where O’Connor spent her adult life.
Previously unknown paintings by author Flannery O’Connor stand on display in Milledgeville, Ga.
Guinea fowl and a butterfly by Flannery O’Connor.
Two paintings of the same church in the exhibit. Curators believe it may be First Presbyterian Church in downtown Milledgeville.
Flannery O’Connor’s portrait of herself with a pheasant, on display with many other paintings by the author often touted as the finest writer of the Southern Gothic, on the grounds of the farm in Milledgeville where she spent her adult life.
Flannery O’Connor’s portrait of herself with a pheasant, on display with many other paintings by the author often touted as the finest writer of the Southern Gothic, on the grounds of the farm in Milledgeville where she spent her adult life.