Age, Biography and Wiki

Carole Harmel was born on 1945 in Washington, DC, US, is an American artist and photographer. Discover Carole Harmel'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 79 years old?

Popular As N/A
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Age 79 years old
Zodiac Sign
Born 1945, 1945
Birthday 1945
Birthplace Washington, DC, US
Nationality United States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1945. She is a member of famous artist with the age 79 years old group.

Carole Harmel Height, Weight & Measurements

At 79 years old, Carole Harmel height not available right now. We will update Carole Harmel's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

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Who Is Carole Harmel's Husband?

Her husband is Arthur Lerner

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Husband Arthur Lerner
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Carole Harmel Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Carole Harmel worth at the age of 79 years old? Carole Harmel’s income source is mostly from being a successful artist. She is from United States. We have estimated Carole Harmel'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
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Timeline

1945

Carole Harmel (born 1945) is an American artist and photographer, who gained recognition for her provocative images of nudes in the 1970s and 1980s and still lifes combining photography with short narratives, Wordplay and mixed media.

Fundamental to Harmel's work is a questioning of reality and photographic conventions, a penchant for surrealism, and humor.

The New Art Examiner described her nudes as having a "startling, queasy impact," "rich in ambiguity, discomforting in content."

About her still lifes, critic Michael Weinstein wrote, "sophisticated academic criticism is fused with love of color and visual form to create images at once conceptually engaging and perceptually arresting."

Harmel played a key role in the development of the pioneering women's cooperative in Chicago, Artemisia Gallery, as an early member and co-founder of its influential photography gallery.

Her work has been featured extensively in the New Art Examiner, Chicago Sun-Times, Chicago Tribune, Artforum, and Midwest Art, and is held in corporate and private collections, including the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, the Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, Wellesley College, and the Illinois State Museum.

In addition to her artistic practice, Harmel has worked as an art critic and educator.

Carole Harmel was born in Washington, DC.

She began college as an English literature major at Smith College, but gravitated to art and transferred to Antioch College in Ohio, for its freer atmosphere.

1969

After earning a BA in Art (1969), she continued on to graduate school at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC), where she studied under renowned photographers Barbara Crane, Ken Josephson, Frank Barsotti, and Harold Allen.

From the beginning, Harmel pushed against the traditional confines of the medium's aesthetics, materials and subject matter.

1972

After earning an MFA in Photography from SAIC (1972), Harmel began teaching at City Colleges of Chicago and became active in Chicago's burgeoning art scene.

She exhibited at the alternative N.A.M.E. Gallery, the Art Institute (AIC), and the women's cooperative Artemisia Gallery.

During much of that time (1972—2007), she has also been an educator at City Colleges of Chicago.

Harmel continues to work and live in Chicago, with her husband, artist Arthur Lerner.

Their daughter, Alexandra, is also an artist and art teacher.

Three things underlie much of Harmel's work: a desire to challenge photographic "reality" and logic, her interest in surrealism, and humor that varies from playful to disquieting.

Her work divides into three major bodies: nudes (1972—1984); still lifes often involving narrative (1984—1998); and collaborative works (2009—).

Harmel quickly gained recognition for her nudes, which were described as provocative, compelling and disturbing in their suggestion and psychological acuity, and deft in the use of color, texture and composition.

In them, she sought to disrupt photography's status as a record of reality, in order to access "expression of an inner, more surreal existence."

She incorporated masks, makeup, costumes and other props that confuse, contradict or obscure the human and sexual reality of her figures, as well as techniques like solarization and toning to further remove the images from objective reality.

Writer Joanna Frueh described the work as both aggressively sexual and absurd, and observed that Harmel's compositions and eerie coloring seemed to trap subjects "in a twilight zone somewhere between everyday life and dreams—or nightmares—come true."

Critics such as Frueh and Dick Jeske found that Harmel's unexpected juxtapositions—of bodies, props, theatrical settings, and spatial or conceptual references (front/back, female/male)—multiplied the uncanny expressive possibilities in her images.

Jeske suggested that her work revealed submerged psychological aspects in everyday subjects, evoking a "mythological but simultaneously contemporary world" or emergent "gods and goddesses" he found haunting or menacing.

1973

Her work won a prize at the 1973 AIC "Chicago and Vicinity Show" (for Masks, 1973), appeared in Heresies, and drew both critical attention and controversy.

1974

At Artemisia, she co-founded its photography gallery with Carol Turchan and Jane Wenger, and helped spur the collective's rise to recognition with artists such as Margaret Wharton, Hollis Sigler, Barbara Grad and Vera Klement; in the 1974 "Chicago and Vicinity Show," gallery members (including Harmel) accounted for more than one-tenth of all the artists chosen.

Joanna Frueh wrote, "You can't view Carole Harmel's photographs with indifference. When gallery-goers walked into Artemisia for her 1974 show, they left immediately or lingered to let seep in what rattled the less voyeuristic."

1978

In 1978, Harmel and Liz Fruzyna presented their collaborative nude, frontal Portraits of Men.

Finkel called them "the feminist answer to the male power trip which the female-nude-as-art-form has been," noting their classic form, composition and elegant tonality referenced historical nudes including Weston's and Bullock's photographs of women.

1979

In 1979, Harmel began film studies at Northwestern University with professors Paddy Whannel, Stuart Kaminsky and Chuck Kleinhans, completing a PhD in 1982.

During that time, she wrote about photography for the publications New Art Examiner, Exposure, and Afterimage.

1980

In her pastel-toned Old Dresses series (1980), objects came to the fore.

Placing antique garments in ambiguous relationships to nude figures, she created antitheses—fabric/skin, fronts/backs, female garments/male nudes, sight/touch—that writer Candida Finkel said carried a surreal, erotic charge as the dresses, though disembodied, continued to conjure humanness.

1983

In the Cocteau-influenced Bird series (1983), Harmel used framing to fragment and abstract her explorations of the "Leda and the Swan" myth in tightly cropped, voyeuristic images of a nude female and an undefinable birdlike creature hinting at intimacy.

Critic Devonna Pieszak wrote that the images' simultaneous evocation of bestial/tender and fascinating/repulsive "reclaim for sexuality the mysterious anxieties and anticipations contemporary explicitness eliminates."

Reception of the work was not without controversy.

1984

In 1984, Harmel began creating still life series that retained a surrealist edge recalling Magritte and Duane Michals, but employed word and visual play, color (post—1986), and narrative, reflecting her film studies experience.

She continued to question photographic reality through disassociations, unusual juxtapositions—and now puns—in works she called more "poetry than prose."

In her Natural Disasters series (1984—1993), Harmel created small stage sets where the relationship between the internal space of a photograph and the external world of its setting were fluid; in sequential images, the sets are invaded by elements such as flowers, fruit or stripes that escape a painting, photograph or still life in the set.

1990

Over the past four-plus decades, Harmel has shown in solo exhibitions at Antioch College, Artemisia, Intuitive Eye Gallery (Washington, DC), FOTO (New York City), Zriny-Hayes, Stuart Wilbur (both Chicago), and Printworks Gallery (Chicago), which has represented her work since 1990.