Age, Biography and Wiki

Carol Rama (Olga Carolina Rama) was born on 17 April, 1918 in Turin, Italy, is an Italian painter (1918–2015). Discover Carol Rama's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 97 years old?

Popular As Olga Carolina Rama
Occupation N/A
Age 97 years old
Zodiac Sign Aries
Born 17 April, 1918
Birthday 17 April
Birthplace Turin, Italy
Date of death 25 September, 2015
Died Place Turin, Italy
Nationality Italy

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 17 April. She is a member of famous painter with the age 97 years old group.

Carol Rama Height, Weight & Measurements

At 97 years old, Carol Rama height not available right now. We will update Carol Rama's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
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Dating & Relationship status

She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.

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Carol Rama Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Carol Rama worth at the age of 97 years old? Carol Rama’s income source is mostly from being a successful painter. She is from Italy. We have estimated Carol Rama's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income painter

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Timeline

1918

Carol Rama (born Olga Carolina Rama; 17 April 1918 – 25 September 2015) was an Italian self-taught artist.

Her painting encompassed an erotic, and sexual identity with specific references to female sensuality.

She began to paint around the mid-thirties and exhibiting her work ten years later.

Born on 17 April 1918, Olga Carolina Rama was the youngest of three children born to Marta (née Pugliaro) and Amabile Rama, who had just returned to Turin the year before their daughter's birth after a six-year stint as migrant workers in Argentina.

Much of Rama's earliest frame of reference comes from factory life.

1920

Through much of the 1920s, the business and the family prospered.

Rama took riding lessons.

She remembered it as a carefree time during which the family sang operatic arias and played dress-up at home.

Her father, Amabile Rama, was a small-scale manufacturer in the engineering industry who produced automobiles under the trademark "Sintesi" as well as unusual unisex bicycles under the trademark "OLT".

1927

Among those working in his factory, at Via Digione 17 in Turin, there was a model employee, Vittorio Valletta, who in 1927 left "Sintesi" to place his talents at the service of FIAT.

And it was following the birth of the FIAT that her father's company began to go downhill, and was declared bankrupt while Carol was still a child.

Hard years followed for the previously prosperous Rama family.

Her once secure middle-class family was socially marginalized.

Gone were the afternoons of singing operatic arias and taking riding lessons.

Rama said, "I started to experience rejection and derision from the same circles that had showered me with privileges before."

1933

Carol Rama's mother, Marta was committed to a psychiatric hospital in 1933; Rama was 15 years old.

Six years later, Amabile, Rama's father, committed suicide.

Rama was still forming herself as a young woman during her mother's mental breakdown.

Frequent visits to the asylum proved decisive: "I felt comfortable in that surrounding. Because it's there I began to have manners and upbringing without either cultural preparation or etiquette".

Observing the unusual, quixotic characters in the asylum and absorbing that atmosphere has a liberating effect on the budding artist, which would inform her whole aesthetic and worldview.

Rama had enrolled at the art academy but school would not be her path forward; she skipped class and dropped out.

Right off the bat she intuitively possessed her own self-assured style, line quality, subject matter, and twisted perspective.

Specificity of vision, brazenly expressed, distinguishes Rama's earliest works.

Rama's work is in the collection of the Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam,

1980

Her work was relatively little known until curator Lea Vergine included several pieces in a 1980 exhibition, prompting Rama to revisit her earlier watercolour style.

In 1980 Rama's work was included in the exhibition of women artists, L’altra metà dell’avanguardia (The Other Half of the Avant-Garde), held at the Palazzo Reale in Milan and curated by Lea Vergine.

2004

In 2004 a retrospective of Rama's work was held at the Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo in Turin, In 2009 the Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi in Berlin held a retrospective.

2015

In 2015 the Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris held a retrospective.

2017

In 2017 the New Museum held a retrospective entitled Carol Rama: Antibodies.

In 2023 her work was included in the exhibition Action, Gesture, Paint: Women Artists and Global Abstraction 1940-1970 at the Whitechapel Gallery in London.

As a painter, Rama began with sex and with watercolour.

Infused with inwardness, watercolour has an intimate relation to the painter's body, with brushwork that tends to revolve around hand and wrist action, much like writing; its scale suited Rama's tabletop home-studio set-up.

A medium of dilution and pollution, bleeding and spillage, watercolour was just the right thing for the then-young artist fascinated by bodies, orifices, fluids, and their intersubjective exchange.

Colour in her early watercolours is generally applied sparingly, in pale washes or barely at all, with strategic, vivid punctuations that draws attention to key erogenous zones: mouths, tongues, nipples, cunts, dicks, and assholes- wet holes and erotic plumbing primed for liquid flow.

Of all the orifices, the mouth is Rama's favourite, as it is the most representative of desire.

Her watercolours redesign anatomies, amputate and reorder limbs, realign orifices, and scramble physiological functions.

Her women are often depicted armless, legless, or both, appearing broken like damaged classical ruins from Italy's ancient past.

At the end of the thirties, Carol Rama also painted some twenty oils on canvas with a less scabrous content, as if her message had been influenced by the more conventional medium.

They are most of all self-portraits in which the coulees are at first laid on flat, in a manner that recalls some of Felice Castorati's early paintings, but the features are stylized to such an extent that they disappear, reducing the face and the body to mere splotches of lumpy paint.

The work of Carol Rama was also the object of what we could call a psychopathological reduction.