As a young artist, Cavat modeled for surrealist artist Rene Magritte and became part of the Abstract Expressionist group, befriending Elaine and Willem De Kooning, Jackson Pollack, and Larry Rivers.[5] Over her career, she worked across media, including paint, clay, metal, marble, jewelry and collage. She was also commissioned to paint murals in Haiti, Greece, and the United States.[4]
In 1995, in collaboration with landscape architect Isabelle Greene and Nobel laureate Walter Kohn, Cavat helped create the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation's Sadako Peace Garden on the 50th anniversary of the Hiroshima tragedy.[6] Noted kinetic sculptor George Rickey spent many winters with his family in a studio on Cavat's property in Santa Barbara.[7]
Cavat was awarded residencies at Yaddo in New York, the McDowell Colony in Maine and the Djerassi Foundation in Northern California. She was exhibited widely in the United States and Italy, and her works are in the permanent collection at the Art, Design and Architecture Museum of the University of California, Santa Barbara[8] and in various private collections. She was exhibited at New York City's Museum of Modern Art in 1956[9] and was reviewed in Artforum,[2] American Riviera Media,[1]Los Angeles Times, New York Herald Tribune and elsewhere. A review of her 1966 exhibition at the Phoenix Art Museum offered praise for her use of color and noted her works incorporating cloth and newsprint.[10] A retrospective of her work was held at Legacy Art Santa Barbara in July 2024.[11]
Cavat died on February 16, 2020, in Santa Barbara.[3]
^ abc"Santa Barbara News-Press Obituaries: Cavat, Irma". Santa Barbara News-Press. June 21, 2021. p. 4.
^ abHeller, Jules; Heller, Nancy G. (2013). "Cavat, Irma (1928-)". North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. Routledge. p. 119. ISBN978-1-135-63882-5.