Caroompas, Carole, 1946-2022

Source Citation

Carole Caroompas (1946 – July 31, 2022) was an American painter known for work which examined the intersection of pop culture and gender archetypes.[1]

Early life and education
Carole Caroompas was born in Oregon City, Oregon, and spent her childhood in Newport Beach, California.[2]

Caroompas earned a B.A. from California State University, Fullerton and an M.F.A. from the University of Southern California.[3] She taught fine art courses at Otis College of Art and Design in Los Angeles.[4]

Awards and fellowships
Caroompas' awards included grants from the Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation, COLA (City of L.A.), two from the National Endowment for the Arts and a California Community Foundation Fellowship.[3] In 1995 she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.[5]

Selected exhibitions
Caroompas exhibited at the Ben Maltz Gallery in Los Angeles, the Whitney Museum of American Art, LACMA, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Western Project in Culver City, Mark Moore in Santa Monica, P.P.O.W. in New York, Sue Spaid Fine Art, the Hammer Museum at UCLA, and the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, DC.

1994: "Before and After Frankenstein: The Woman Who Knew Too Much" at Sue Spaid Fine Art, Los Angeles, California[6]

1998: "Carole Caroompas: Lady of the Castle Perilous" at Otis College of Art and Design, Los Angeles, California[7]

1999: “Heathcliff and the Femme Fatale go on Tour” at the Mark Moore Gallery in Santa Monica, California[8]

2008: "Dancing with Misfits: Eye-Dazzler” at Western Project, Culver City, California[9]

2015: "Lore and Behold: The Art of Carole Caroompas" at Pasadena City College[10]

Personal life
Caroompas died in 2022, from Alzheimer's disease, at the age of 76.[4]

References
Curtis, Cathy (27 April 1999). "Simmering Talent in O.C. Suburbs". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
Hanselman, Cheryl (2 October 1990). "Grimm's Stories Take On Adult Perspective : Exhibition: Carole Caroompas' paintings challenge the foundations on which childhood fairy tales are based". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
"Carole Caroompas: Biography". Western Project. Retrieved May 20, 2013.
"L.A. artist Carole Caroompas, performer and painter who bucked convention, dies at 76". Los Angeles Times. 2022-08-04. Retrieved 2022-08-05.
Carole Caroompas Archived May 4, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation
Myers, T. R. (1994). Carole Caroompas. New Art Examiner, 2237-38.
Roth, C. (1998). Carole Caroompas at Otis College of Art and Design. Artweek, 2920-21.
Cooper, J. (1999). Carole Caroompas: Mark Moore Gallery. New Art Examiner, 26(9), 47-48.
Duncan, M. (2008). Carole Caroompas at Western Project. Art In America, 96(5), 204-205.
The Galleries at PCC. "Arts". Oct 7 - Nov 6, 2015. "Lore and Behold: The Art of Carole Caroompas". Pasadena City College. Retrieved 3 November 2017.

Citations

Date: 1946 (Birth) - 2022-07-31 (Death)

Name Entry: Caroompas, Carole, 1946-2022

Name Entry: Caroompas, Carole J., 1946-2022

Occupation: Singers

Occupation: Artist

Occupation: Collagists

Occupation: Performance artists

Occupation: Women artists

Place: Oregon City

Place: Los Angeles

Place: Newport Beach

Subject: Art, American

Subject: Feminism in art

Subject: Performance art

Subject: Popular culture in art

Source Citation

Biographical/Historical Note
Carole Caroompas (1946–2022) was a Los Angeles-based artist known for her feminist and conceptual work, which explored themes of gender and power dynamics through collage, large-scale paintings, and performance. Spanning five decades, her art reflects a deep engagement with literature, mythology, and popular culture, incorporating fragmented narratives and diverse media to challenge societal norms, question contemporary gender roles, and offer alternative perspectives on authority, often with humor.

Caroompas began her career in 1971, creating works that utilized impermanent installations and uncommon materials. In her earliest exhibited works— Delayed Occurrences (1972), Falls (1972), and Egyptian Goddesses (1972–1973)—she explored ephemerality and anti-formal arrangements by pouring paint and glitter onto walls, linoleum, paper, and cardboard tubes.

From 1974 to 1985, Caroompas shifted her focus to collage, combining text, image, and found materials to examine gender through references both to herself and to literature and popular culture. Works from this period include Remembrance of Things Past (1976), Lost and Found: An Excavation (1978), and A Hermetic Romance from A to Z (1980–1981). Between 1978 and 1989, she performed narrative and musical pieces throughout Southern California that reflected the themes present in her visual art. She also released two music albums: Target Practice (1981) and La Lucha (1989).

After 1985, Caroompas transitioned to painting on canvas. Although she moved away from her earlier, more personal works, her feminist perspective remained evident in her new large-scale paintings, such as Fairy Tales (1988–1990), Before and After Frankenstein: The Woman Who Knew Too Much (1991–1994), and Hester and Zorro: In Quest of a New World (1994–1997). Her series—referred to as "sets" by the artist and ranging in size from four to 26 pieces—employed fragmented narratives from literature, mythology, popular culture, and other sources to deconstruct sexist and authoritarian perspectives. Through these works, she posed critical questions and suggested alternative viewpoints on societal structures and hierarchies. This approach continued until her series Psychedelic Jungle (2004) and Dancing With Misfits: Eye-Dazzler (2007), in which she had decidedly switched to exploring existential themes like alienation, mortality, and the loss of Americana.

Following Dancing With Misfits, Caroompas created Uncle Lenny: Right as Wrong/Wrong as Right (2011), a body of ten works based on comedian Lenny Bruce that examined the artist's role in society. Her final completed work appears to be Hallucinatory Logic in the Sahara (2016), a series incorporating imagery from the film Lawrence of Arabia (1962) and popular representations of the Sahara Desert and its people.

Caroompas was born in Oregon City, Oregon, and spent her childhood in Newport Beach, California. She attended Newport Harbor High School, California State University, Fullerton (BA, 1968), and the University of Southern California (MFA, 1971). After graduating in 1971, she joined a consciousness-raising group with artists Karen Carson, Judy Chicago, and Miriam Schapiro. She later taught at several institutions, including California State University, Northridge (1972–1975), Immaculate Heart College (1973–1976), Los Angeles Valley College (1974–1976, 1980–1981), Cal State Fullerton (1976–1978), and the Otis College of Art and Design (mid-1980s–2020). Throughout her artistic career, she remained based in Los Angeles and was represented by local galleries including Jan Baum-Iris Silverman Gallery, Sue Spaid Fine Art, and Western Project. She passed away on July 31, 2022.

Sources consulted:

Carole Caroompas papers, accession no. 2023.M.25, Artist's statement, 2003, Box 83, Folder 2.

Otis Gallery, ed. Carole Caroompas: Lady of the Castle Perilous. Los Angeles: Otis College of Art and Design, 1997. Published in conjunction with an exhibition of the same title, organized by and presented at the Otis College of Art and Design, November 1997–January 1998.

Wagley, Catherine. “L.A. artist Carole Caroompas, performer and painter who bucked convention, dies at 76.” Los Angeles Times, August 4, 2022.

Scope and Content
The collection documents the life and work of Los Angeles-based artist Carole Caroompas, primarily focusing on her five-decade career in visual arts while also covering her music and performance art. The archive comprises Caroompas's writings, such as journals and dream diaries, along with notebooks containing extensive research for her works. Substantial photographic documentation captures her artistic output, personal life, and contemporaries in the Los Angeles art scene. The collection features source materials and preparatory drawings for her collages and paintings, exhibition-related materials, and professional papers encompassing gallery correspondence and grant applications. Audiovisual materials consist of performance recordings and musical releases.

Series I. Albums and performances documents Caroompas's artistic output through audiovisual materials, color slides, photographs, and related papers. It includes Caroompas's artist's book Five Fables (1977–1978) and props from her musical and performance work.

Series II. Notes, source materials, and preparatory drawings illustrates Caroompas's artistic process for major works from 1977 to 2016. It contains her notes, sketches, and source materials including books, comics, magazines, postcards, clippings, and computer printouts. Much of the imagery in these materials can be directly linked to her finished works.

Series III. Artworks and published writings contains examples of Caroompas's published works and visual art, including "Surprise Hotel" (1975), "Chymical Wedding" (1979), and "The Weaver's Dream: A Lullabye" (1981), along with photographic prints and a mixed-media work.

Series IV. Documentation of visual works comprises visual and textual documentation of Caroompas's art from 1968 to 2011, including color slides and transparencies, computer discs, computer printouts, photographic prints, and written descriptions and plans for several works.

Series V. Exhibition files documents 111 exhibitions and gallery shows in which Caroompas's work was displayed through exhibition catalogs, exhibition ephemera, and other papers.

Series VI. Professional papers includes Caroompas's artist's statements, curricula vitae, fellowship and grant applications, gallery correspondence and loan forms, interviews, press clippings, sales records, studio portraits, and other papers.

Series VII. Per

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Relation: alumnusOrAlumnaOf California State university, Fullerton