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Cecily Barth Firestein, the printmaker, has been
making art since she was eight years old and went for art lessons in
Woodstock, New York. Over the years, she studied with Hans Hoffman,
Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Theodoros Stamos, Hale Woodruff and the printmaker
Roberto De Lamonica.
Her initial medium was oil on canvas, but she
shifted to collage and painted wooden constructions before gravitating
to printmaking in the 1970’s. She has remained a printmaker in the
intervening decades. Firestein has become recognized as one of the
leading exponents of the mixed-media monotype: a single, unique
impression pulled from a painting on a large, thick plate of glass,
and worked up with overpainting, drawing, and a complex variety of
collage elements. It is interesting to note that she achieves the
transfer by placing dampened rag paper on top of the painted glass
surface, then applying pressure with a steam iron rather than with a
heavy roller. She uses oil based inks mixed with oil of clove.
Her large painterly abstract prints have been
widely exhibited here and abroad. She recently presented her 34th
one-person exhibition in New York City. Ms. Firestein’s images are
known for their lusty originality in the handling of color as well as
for their strong humorous and sensuous impact. A unique confluence of
elegance and gestural immediacy has always distinguished Firestein’s
work. It continues to be very much in evidence. Now, however,
something has been added to her mode of lyrical expressionism: bold,
somewhat bawdy, representations of the human figure, born directly out
of the artist’s interest in oriental art and Sumi painting.
The emergence of the figure is quite obvious if
one views the mixed media monotype, “Ancestor Memory with Crow”
alongside the slightly later piece, “That Orbed Maiden with White
Fire Laden, Whom Mortals Call the Moon.” By looking from the first
work to the second, we see how Firestein transformed the bold black
abstract calligraphy into the luminous white figure set against the
lunar circle that figures in most of her compositions. A delicately
delineated bird, generally a crow, perched on each of her powerfully
painted figures is also derived from the artist’s interest in
Japanese prints.
Her monotypes are included in many corporate and
museum collections, such as those of the Corcoran, Delaware Art
Museum, Brooklyn Museum, Freud Museums in Vienna and in London, and
Zimmerli Art Museum.
Cecily Firestein has also had a sustained
interest in the ancient and modern printmaking form of rubbings. Her
second volume on rubbings, Making Paper and Fabric Rubbings (Lark
Books, 1999) has just been published.
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