Carlisle
Cooper (1919 - )
Painter Carlisle Cooper has always been concerned with the human
condition - the problem of man’s relationship to Truth and
the problem of man’s soul/psyche remaining individualistic
and triumphant over the mechanized and computerized era in which
we find ourselves. He believes that art’s important role in
this era is what it has always been in history - - to reveal man
to himself.
A native of North Carolina, Cooper attended Duke University, Chicago
Academy of Fine Arts, American Academy of Art (Chicago), the School
of the Art Institute of Chicago (B.A.E. and M.A.E. degrees) and
in the Los Angeles area, Chouinard and U.C.L.A. He has been an art
professor for many years at Ventura Community College in California.
Among his teachers, he lists Isobel McKinnon Rupprecht and Edgar
Rupprecht (who were original students and sponsors of Hans); Boris
Anisfeld, internationally known Russian painter and former set-designer
for the Metropolitan Opera House, New York; and William Mosby (graduate
of Brussels Academy of Fine Art, Belgium).
As a young man, before studying to become an artist, Mr. Cooper
originated and drew an adventure type cartoon strip, entitiled “Fighting
with Daniel Boone”. The strip was syndicated nationally by
the Chicago Tribune/NewYork daily news syndicate, appearing weekly
for several years in cities across America, including Chicago, New
York, Boston, Detroit, Los Angeles. The strip was terminated due
to Cooper’s military war service.
During the past few years Cooper has had over 25 one-man exhibitions
of his work in Southern California. In 1984, he was invited to exhibit
50 of his smaller paintings in Berlin during the annual Berlin Festwochen,
the week during which the fall and winter season opens there. Under
the auspices of the American Embassy in Germany, the exhibition
was later sent to Heidelberg, and then to Darmstadt for a month-long
showing in each city. In 1988, the artist also had another exhibition
of his small paintings in Munich, Germany. Cooper’s artisitic
exploration of the human animal continues to this day. He was recently
given 3 merit awards by the Buenaventura Art Association and has
had two 1999 exhibitions at Ventura’s Art City II.
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