This biography from the Archives of AskART:
| A painter of scenes from his home, both real and imaginary, and
wherever he was at the time, Carroll Cloar recreated rural landscapes
in a style combining realism and naivete with people, old buildings,
and items that remind viewers of places from Americana childhood.
Cloar
was born in Earle, Arkansas, a small cotton growing town, and he
enrolled in Southwestern College where he earned a B.A. Degree.
He went to Europe to visit museums, and upon his return enrolled in the
Memphis Academy of Art*. In 1936, he began part-time studies at
the Art Students League* in New York, where he was much influenced by
teachers Arnold Blanch and William McNulty.
He created a
comic-strip character called "Junius," which was a combination of
Superman and Popeye, but "Junius" was not successful.
Cloar's skill in lithography* earned him a McDowell Fellowship* in
1940, which allowed him to travel to Europe, but instead of going
there, he went to the Southwestern United States and Mexico, a place he
re-visited in 1946.
He worked in New York until 1953 and then moved to Memphis where he died in 1993.
Source:
Celia Walker, "Twentieth Century Painting in Tennessee", American Art Review, 8/2002, p. 144.
* For more in-depth information about these terms and others, see
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http://www.askart.com/AskART/lists/Art_Definition.aspx
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Biography from David Lusk Gallery:
| Carroll Cloar was born on January 18, 1913, outside Earle, Arkansas. He lived on a cotton farm with his parents, two older brothers, and an older sister, who unfortunately died. Cloar was not particularly close to either of his parents. He was fearful of his father, and later he would paint his father as a large and intimidating man. His relationship with his mother was warmer, but still they were never very close. Cloar's mother did tell wild stories that influenced his painting.
As a young child Cloar went to school near his home, then attended high school in Earle, Arkansas. In high school, he won an art award from the James Lee Art Academy in Memphis that inspired him to pursue an art career. In 1930, Cloar moved to Memphis to go to Southwestern as well as James Lee Art Academy. He soon became overwhelmed with both loads of work, so Cloar decided to drop out of Lee Academy and continue with his English major at Southwestern. Cloar began to feel bored with his studies, so he changed from an English major to a Spanish major.
Cloar decided he wanted to become a cartoonist, so he moved to New York to work and study. He soon discovered that he was not meant to be a comic strip writer. However, Cloar did find that he had a talent for lithographs. He moved out west and he ended up in Mexico. While he was there he continued working on lithographs that were more about his life in Arkansas then of Mexico. The Second World War temporarily interrupted his work, but he did paint figures on bomber airplanes. After the war he returned to Mexico; a year later he moved back to New York. There Cloar signed with his first gallery.
Life Magazine published some of his lithographs under the title of "Backwoods Boyhood." The article was Cloar's first major recognition. It greatly influenced him to continue with the theme of Southern culture, so he moved back to Memphis in 1955. There Cloar ensconced himself in Southern culture. He was also close to home which was a primary resource for painting themes. Cloar was interested in depicting childhood memories because he was searching for his own identity. Through the use of his memory and photographs he recreated a mystical childhood.
Carroll Cloar's paintings of Southern culture bring a whole new respect, image, and perspective of the South.
Education: Memphis College of Art, Memphis; Art Students League, New York; Rhodes College, Memphis
Solo Exhibitions: 2005 The Collector's Cloar, Pine Bluff -The Arts & Science Center, Pine Bluff, AR Recollection, David Lusk Gallery, Memphis 2003 carroll cloar: notable drawings from the 60’s, David Lusk Gallery, Memphis 2002 Dreams and Scenes: A Collection of Paintings, Drawings and Lithographs, Greenville Arts Council, Greenville MS 2001 Carroll Cloar: Beginning Points Revisited, Arkansas State University, Jonesboro, AR Crossroads: The Drawings of Carroll Cloar, Christian Brothers University, Memphis 2000 Works from the Estate, David Lusk Gallery, Memphis 1994 Kurts Bingham Gallery, Memphis 1993 Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis 1991 Retrospective, Memphis State University, Memphis Kurts Bingham Gallery, Memphis 1989 Schmidt Bingham Gallery, New York 1988 Retrospective from Arkansas Collectors, Arkansas Arts Center, Little Rock 1987 Schmidt Bingham Gallery, New York 1983 Tennessee State Museum, Nashville Forum Gallery, New York 1981 Forum Gallery, New York 1979 Forum Gallery, New York 1976 Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis 1973 Carroll Cloar, Kennedy Galleries, New York 1972 Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis 1968 State University of New York at Albany, Albany, NY Alan Gallery, New York 1967 M.H. DeYoung, Memorial Museum, San Francisco 1966 Alan Gallery, New York Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis 1963 Fort Worth Art Center, Fort Worth 1961 Arkansas Arts Center, Little Rock 1960 High Museum of Art, Atlanta
Group Exhibitions: 2006 Katrina Benefit, Lisa Kurts Gallery, Memphis 2004 Jackson Summer Art Salon, David Lusk Gallery, Jackson, MS Work selected for participation in the US Art in the Embassies Program, on loan to the US Embassy in Damascus, Syria 2002 Art of the 20th Century, New York A Century of Progress: Twentieth Century Painting in Tennessee, Cheekwood Museum of Art, Nashville 1992 Southern Genre, Kurts Bingham Gallery, Memphis Selected Works 1935 - 1985, Kurts Bingham Gallery, Memphis 1991 Form, Fantasy, Function, Kurts Bingham Gallery, Memphis 1987 Collector's Choice, Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS 1983-84 Southern Artists, Traveling Exhibition, Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, NY; Whitney Museum of Art, New York, NY; Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, PA; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY
Bibliography: Paul Greenberg, Carrol Cloar in Pine Bluff, Arkansas Demoratic Gazette, July 3, 2005 Lisa Broadwater, The Cult of Cloar, Arkansas Democratic Gazette,October 1, 2000, section E Vanessa E. Jones, Tugging Delta Heart Strings: Eloquence of Cloar to join artist Legacy, Commercial Appeal, June 25,1995 Linda Romine, The Collectible Carroll Cloar, Memphis Business Journal, Nov. 14-18, 1994 Edwin Howard, Remembering Cloar, the Stories His Works Capture, Memphis Business Journal, April 19-23, 1993 Marilyn Sadler, The Art and Life of Carroll Cloar, Memphis Magazine, 1993, pgs. 46-60 Roberta Smith, Carroll Cloar, a Realist Painter of Rural America, Is Dead at 80, The New York Times, April 13, 1993 Frederic Koeppel, MSU Award Lauds Cloar for Work as Artist, Commercial Appeal, March 6, 1991 Frederic Koeppel, Cloar Art Retrospective Contains Riches Galore, Commercial Appeal, March 3, 1991 Edwin Howard, Accomplishment of Carroll Cloar: He Created a World, Memphis Business Journal, Feb. 25-March 1, 1991 Frederic Koeppel, MSU to Show Retrospective of Cloar's Art, Commercial Appeal, February 15, 1991 Carroll Cloar, Hostile Butterflies and Other Paintings, Memphis State University Press, 1977 Arkansas Traveler, Time Magazine, March 5, 1956 Backwoods Boyhood, Life Magazine, January 26, 1948, pgs. 79-82
Museum Collections: Addison Gallery of American Art, Andover, MA Arkansas Arts Center, Little Rock Art Museum of Sunrise, Charleston, WV Brooklyn Museum of Fine Art, Brooklyn Butler Institute, OH Carroll Reese Museum, Johnson City, TN Cheekwood Museum, Nashville High Museum of Art, Atlanta Hirshorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC Library of Congress, Washington, DC Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, Memphis Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, Montgomery, AL Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, St. Petersburg, FL Neuberger Museum, Purchase, NY Newark Museum, Newark, NJ Rockford Art Gallery, Rockford, IL Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, MA State University of New York, Albany, NY Tennessee Fine Arts Center at Cheekwood, Nashville Tennessee State Museum, Nashville Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, CT Whitney Museum, New York Williams College Museum of Art, Williamstown, MA
Awards: 1978 Honorary Doctorate Degree, Rhodes College, Memphis 1966 Purchase Award, The American Institute of Arts and Letters Honorary Arkansas Traveler Honorary Phi Beta Kappa Library of Congress, Purchase Prize Butler Institute, Purchase Prize 1946 Guggenheim Fellowship 1940 MacDowell Traveling Fellowship
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Biography from Greg Thompson Fine Art:
| Carroll Cloar was raised on a cotton farm in Arkansas, and was inspired
to pursue an art career in high school. In 1931 Cloar moved to
Memphis, Tennessee and studied English and Spanish at Southwestern
University. He also took a few courses at the Memphis Academy of
Art.
Soon after graduating from Southwestern, Cloar moved to New
York City to become an illustrator and cartoonist. In 1936 he
began studying part time at the Art Students League where he was
heavily influenced by his instructors, Arnold Blanch and William
McNulty. He eventually grew tired of the city and traveled
through the Southwestern United States and Mexico. During this
time he continued to produce work inspired by rural life in Arkansas.
His style combined realism and naïveté with people and places from his
childhood memories.
His work belongs to many important museum
collections including: the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston; the Hirshorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.; and
the Arkansas Arts Center, Little Rock. |
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