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Internationally acclaimed Realist painter whose works reflect
life in Arkansas Delta |
Carrol
Cloar
Painting
Earle
Artist
Carroll Cloar was born in Earle, Arkansas, on January 18, 1913. His childhood
memories of his birthplace defined his art during the latter part of his career
and gained him national recognition. Flat color forms and decorative patterning
are elements of his distinctive style.
Cloar came to Tennessee in 1930 and attended Southwestern University at Memphis
as an English major. After a trip to Europe he returned to Memphis and enrolled
at the Memphis Academy of Art, studying with George Oberteuffer. From 1936 to
1940 he attended the Art Students League in New York, studying under Arnold
Blanch, William McNutty, Harry Sternberg, and Ernest Feine. During this period
he produced a series of lithographs based upon the landscape and community of
Earle, Arkansas, which gained him the McDowell Traveling Fellowship in 1940.
Cloar spent this time journeying through the western United States and Mexico
before joining the Army Air Corps during World War II.
After the war Cloar revisited Mexico on a Guggenheim Fellowship, which he
received in 1946. He continued to travel extensively throughout Central and
South America until 1950. In 1955, after he had clearly determined the direction
of his art, Cloar established a permanent residence in Memphis in order to
remain closer to his southern roots. The year of his return, Cloar produced
fourteen works, among them his well-known My Father Was Big as a Tree. He
held his first one-man show in Memphis in 1953; this was followed by a New York
showing in 1956 which firmly established his career and gave him national
exposure. In the ensuing years he had more than ten exhibitions at Tennessee
museums in addition to his New York showings. Museums across the country and
private collectors acquired his works.
Cloar drew images of churches, graveyards, schoolhouses, and individuals from
old Kodak photographs found in his family albums. He also obtained photographs
from the estate of an African American photographer in Arkansas and transformed
them into paintings such as The Wedding Party (1971) and The Pastor
(1970). Termed "a poetic expression of a child's vision and memory," his
interpretation of these people, places, and incidents represents a distillation
of his personal Arkansas boyhood experiences in the early twentieth century. (1)
Cloar described these images as "American faces, timeless dress and timeless
customs . . . the last of old America that isn't long for this earth." (2) Cloar
died in Memphis in 1993.