A punch of color : fifty years of painting by Camille Patha /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Tacoma, Washington : Tacoma Art Museum, [2014]
Description:95 pages ; 27 cm.
Language:English
Series:Northwest perspective series
Northwest perspective series.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/9969191
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other uniform titles:Hushka, Rock, 1966- Power and paint.
Maurer, Alison, Contextualizing Camille.
Patha, Camille, 1938- Paintings. Selections.
Other authors / contributors:Tacoma Art Museum, issuing body.
ISBN:9780924335402 (hardback)
0924335408 (hardback)
Notes:Includes bibliographical references.
Summary:"Throughout her six-decade career, Camille Patha's painting has oscillated between the figurative and the abstract. Patha began painting gestural abstraction in the 1960s then deliberately explored various painting styles, including hard-edged abstraction and surrealist-infused photorealism and, finally, a return to abstraction. During each era of her career, Patha demonstrated a full mastery of painting, presenting canvases that wholly embody her imagery and vocabulary with an unwavering voice and shocking vigor. Patha asserts her power as a painter by creating imagery of a complete universe that enables the viewer to be fully absorbed within a boundless volume. In her paintings, she shares a sense of wonder about the existential conundrums confronting every person and with the exuberance of her elastic symbolism. A Punch of Color is the first retrospective of her work since 1979. Rock Hushka is curator of contemporary and Northwest art and director of curatorial administration at Tacoma Art Museum"--
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Camille Patha, the subject of a solo show at the Tacoma Art Museum, is an artist of deft skill who has an exuberant, occasionally trippy, sense of color. This exhibition catalogue suggests that one reason for Patha's relative obscurity may be her gender. The clear, well-written catalogue by the show's curators describes Patha's rare talent, especially evident in the pure abstractions of her later works in which vibrant swathes of color burst with organic shapes that seem to pulsate across the canvases. Lucent Thicket (2005), Tropican (2009-2010), and Perpetually Forward (2011) are highlights. As Patha herself says about her need for vibrant hues, "I didn't want to suppress my color, and my color began oozing out of my ears." These joyful paintings will surely earn Patha new fans. 49 color illus. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review