Historian Kathryn Olmsted was a graduate student at University of California, Davis, when the Robert Arneson's Egghead Series of sculptures began being installed throughout campus. That was the first she had heard of the first-generation art faculty known for his clay works and who is often dubbed the father of the California Funk movement.
But a few months ago, she learned much more about the artist鈥檚 story than the iconic white heads that dot campus.
Olmsted, who has been a history professor at 嘿嘿视频 since 2001, has written an essay in a newly published for New York鈥檚 George Adams Gallery exhibition of Arneson鈥檚 work. is on view at the Manhattan gallery through Oct. 26.
Like many people, Olmsted had never known of his war works, which were completed at a time when he and his wife, Sandra Shannonhouse, who wrote the introduction to the catalog, became politically active in their hometown of Benicia. That鈥檚 the town where Arneson 鈥 one of the original 嘿嘿视频 art faculty who taught at the university from the 1960s to the 1990s 鈥 grew up. It is also where in later life he became actively concerned about national and international proliferation of nuclear weapons.
Arneson, true to form, took his political feelings and activism to his clay, paint and paper, creating what is often painful, crushing commentary on the 1980s arms race.
鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know much about him, and what he did toward the end of his life,鈥 said Olmsted, who visited with the Arneson family at the Arneson archives in Benicia to research the essay.
鈥淗e created art about a bleak subject 鈥 nuclear war 鈥 and that really was a bold move on his part.鈥 鈥 Kathryn Olmsted
A history with art
This was not the first time Olmsted has written about art. In 2018, she wrote for a New York Metropolitan Museum of Art on a show called . She also engaged in a panel discussion on that exhibition.
That was very much in line with her research, as she is known in media, political and academic circles as a historian who specializes in conspiracy theories, particularly those that are anti-government. She has written and commentaries on conspiracies throughout history.
A 鈥楴uclear War Head鈥 and other in-the-face art
Her essay in the latest catalog is titled, 鈥樷淲e鈥檙e in Serious Trouble Now,鈥: Robert Arneson鈥檚 Anti-Nuclear Politics.鈥
About the place and time Arneson created this art, Olmsted wrote: 鈥淎ll around him, Robert Arneson could see his fellow Californians working to force government officials to stop the arms race. He shared their outrage and chose to express it through his art.鈥
鈥淧erhaps it is time to recommit to the principles that Arneson fought for in his art.鈥 鈥 Olmsted in her essay
Read the full Arts Blog story and see photos from the New York exhibition.
Related content
A Sojourner's Path: From a Temporary Building to the World and Back
SF MOMA video: