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Indepth Arts News: "Squeak Carnwath : Painting Is No Ordinary Object" 2009-04-25 until 2009-08-23 Oakland Museum of California Oakland, CA, USA
As the title indicates, a painting is "no ordinary object" for Carnwath (American, b. 1947). Her recurring motifs-among them numbers, rabbits, and lists-reflect personal and universal themes; each meticulously applied layer of paint carries meaning and inquiry.
"Painting is a philosophical enterprise," Carnwath says, "a kind of alchemy . . . inert material becomes something else-a document of being, a repository of the human spirit."
An Oakland resident since 1970, Carnwath received her MFA from the California College of the Arts in 1977, with high distinction in ceramics. Within a few years she decided not to work in clay, due in part to the chauvinistic attitude within the medium at the time.
"Painting then became Carnwath's primary means of expression," curator Tsujimoto observes, "a talismanic device to explore themes of loss, loneliness, and the search for happiness and knowledge."
A tenured professor of art practice at UC Berkeley, Carnwath also taught at UC Davis (1983-1998). She has received fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. Carnwath has influenced hundreds of young artists in her three decades of teaching and art making.
The exhibition's companion book, Painting Is No Ordinary Object, is a 160-page retrospective of Carnwath's career. It features more than 80 color reproductions and essays by Tsujimoto and art critic and poet John Yau (co-published by Pomegranate, 2009).
Carnwath will discuss her work and sign books on Sunday, May 3, 2 p.m. For details and a list of related programs, see www.museumca.org.
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