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Catherine Parker was born in Gardenville, a small
town just outside of Buffalo, NY. Her father was the well known watercolor
painter, Charles E. Burchfield. Her mother was Bertha Kenreich, the daughter
of a farmer. From both parents, she and her four siblings all learned a
love of classical music and nature, especially the drama of weather and
the seasons.
Growing
up in the home of a painter, it was natural for Parker to want to
become one. After high school, she studied for a year at the Buffalo Art
Institute. But wanting to move away from the influence of her father,
she left Buffalo to study at the Kansas City Art Institute in Kansas City,
Missouri. She studied there for three years, where her principal painting
instructor was Ross Braught.
After art
school, she married Kenneth Parker, a fellow student. They lived for
several years in Denver before moving to Amarillo, Texas in l956 where
they raised their three children: Christine, Douglas and Jennifer. Throughout
those early years, Parker painted constantly and exhibited regularly.
However, her work never satisfied her, and for a period of about eight
years, she quit painting entirely and studied music instead. Her instrument
was the 'cello, which she had studied as a child. She graduated from West
Texas State University in l970,with a degree in music education, and played
with the Amarillo symphony and in chamber music groups.
In l975,
Parker and her husband were divorced and she subsequently moved to California.
There she began painting again. Since at this time she needed to earn
a living, she worked at various jobs, mostly teaching art, and substitute
teaching in the public schools.
In l982,
Parker made the decision to move back to Buffalo. For her, it was
a kind of surrender, both to the necessity of pursuing a life as a painter
and to accepting and appreciating the reality of being her father's daughter.
While she could not escape the obvious influence of a famous artist for
a father, she went on to develop her own views and style, which are separate
and distinct from his.
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Parker has
traveled widely and many of her paintings reflect this. She has visited
France, painting and drawing the interiors of the cathedrals of Paris
and the orchards and vineyards of southern France . She once visited Jennifer
and her family in Papua New Guinea and produced several paintings from
memories of that country. In the US, she travels regularly to California,
New Mexico and Minnesota, where Christine, Douglas, Jennifer and their
children now live. The New Mexico landscape, with its vast sense of space,
has a particular appeal for her.
Artist's Statement
I am attempting
in my work to find a balance between what is seen and what is remembered
or imagined. I find that I go back and forth between more representational
and more abstract.
My images
come from nature and the city and I find in the rhythms of the seasons,
metaphors for my life.
I am intrigued by the connections between the arts and often work in collaboration with musicians and poets.
The artists
whom I admire and who have influenced my work include Charles Burchfield,
Milton Avery, Arthur Dove, Richard Diebenkorn and Mark Rothko. The sculptures
of Henry Moore and Isamu Noguchi have had a profound effect on me.
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