Cynthia Mailman

Last updated
Cynthia Mailman
Born1942
The Bronx, New York
NationalityAmerican
Alma materSchool of Industrial Art, Pratt Institute, Mason Gross School of the Arts
Occupation(s)Painter, educator

Cynthia Mailman (born 1942 in the Bronx, New York) is an American painter and educator. She is known for figurative and landscape works done in a "cool, pared-down" style. [1] Her early paintings were presented from a perspective inside the artist's VW van, looking outward, and include mirrors, wipers or other interior elements against the exterior landscape. [2] By doing this, Mailman put the observer in the driver's seat, which is also the artist's point of view. [3] According to Lawrence Alloway, "The interplay of directional movement and expanding space is a convincing expansion of the space of landscape painting". [4]

Contents

Education

Mailman graduated with an academic diploma in Advertising Art and Illustration from the School of Industrial Art (SIA), earned a BS in Fine Art and Education from Pratt Institute, and received an MFA in painting from the Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University. [5]

Feminism

Cynthia Mailman was an active participant in the feminist art movement. [6] She was an original member of SOHO20 Artists (est. 1973), often called SOHO20 Gallery, [7] a feminist, artist-run exhibition space. [8] Mailman also participated in The Sister Chapel, a collaborative installation that celebrated female role models, which premiered at P.S.1 in January 1978. [9] For The Sister Chapel, Mailman painted God, a monumental painting of the supreme deity in the form of a powerful nude woman. [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]

Commissions

In 1979, Mailman was commissioned to create a mural for the PATH concourse at the original World Trade Center station. The commission was by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey through the CETA Artist Project. The 8-by-54-foot mural was entitled Commuter Landscape, a view of the Pulaski Skyway as seen through the train windows. It was seen by over 100,000 people a day. It was destroyed in the first terrorist attack on the WTC in 1993. [15] [16] Other commissions came from City Walls, Inc. for a 24-by-26-foot wall mural in Staten Island, and from The Wall Street Journal for the 2000 Cow Parade in NYC [17]

Collections

Mailman has had over 20 solo exhibitions and has participated in numerous group shows. Her work is in the permanent collections of the Everson Museum, the Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, the Staten Island Museum, [18] as well as the Sylvia Sleigh Collection at the Rowan University Art Gallery. [19] Her work is also in numerous private collections. Mailman has received grants from the New York State (1976, 1987) and Staten Island, NY (1987) art council, as well as from the NJ Committee on the Humanities (1979) and a CAPS grant (1976). Her work has been reviewed and discussed in many major newspapers and art journals. [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25] [26]

Related Research Articles

Lawrence Reginald Alloway was an English art critic and curator who worked in the United States from 1961. In the 1950s, he was a leading member of the Independent Group in the UK and in the 1960s was an influential writer and curator in the US. He first used the term "mass popular art" in the mid-1950s and used the term "Pop Art" in the 1960s to indicate that art has a basis in the popular culture of its day and takes from it a faith in the power of images. From 1954 until his death in 1990, he was married to the painter Sylvia Sleigh.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marguerite Zorach</span> American painter

Marguerite Zorach was an American Fauvist painter, textile artist, and graphic designer, and was an early exponent of modernism in America. She won the 1920 Logan Medal of the Arts.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">A.I.R. Gallery</span>

A.I.R. Gallery is the first all female artists cooperative gallery in the United States. It was founded in 1972 with the objective of providing a professional and permanent exhibition space for women artists during a time in which the works shown at commercial galleries in New York City were almost exclusively by male artists. A.I.R. is a not-for-profit, self-underwritten arts organization, with a board of directors made up of its New York based artists. The gallery was originally located in SoHo at 97 Wooster Street, and was located on 111 Front Street in the DUMBO neighborhood of Brooklyn until 2015. In May 2015, A.I.R. Gallery moved to its current location at 155 Plymouth St, Brooklyn, NY 11201.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sylvia Sleigh</span> Welsh-American artist

Sylvia Sleigh was a Welsh-born naturalised American realist painter who lived and worked in New York City. She is known for her role in the feminist art movement and especially for reversing traditional gender roles in her paintings of nude men, often using conventional female poses from historical paintings by male artists like Diego Vélazquez, Titian, and Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres. Her most well-known subjects were art critics, feminist artists, and her husband, Lawrence Alloway.

SOHO20 Artists, Inc., known as SOHO20 Gallery, was founded in 1973 by a group of women artists intent on achieving professional excellence in an industry where there was a gross lack of opportunities for women to succeed. SOHO20 was one of the first galleries in Manhattan to showcase the work of an all-woman membership and most of the members joined the organization as emerging artists. These artists were provided with exhibition opportunities that they could not find elsewhere.

John Lucas Perreault was a poet, art curator, art critic and artist.

Cecilia Roser, who works under the name Ce Roser, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1925. Roser has been active in New York City as an artist since the 1960s. Ever since childhood, Roser had been painting and drawing. While studying in Berlin, Roser learned of a female artist named Käthe Kollwitz. Kollwitz, who worked until the day she died, was an inspiration to Roser. Remarking that she would like to live that way too, Roser proceeded to emphasize the need for young artists, especially women, to find a fitting predecessor and mentor.

The Sister Chapel (1974–1978) is a visual arts installation, conceived by Ilise Greenstein and created as a collaboration by thirteen women artists during the feminist art movement. Before its completion, the critic and curator Lawrence Alloway recognized its potential to be "a notable contribution to the long-awaited legible iconography of women in political terms." The Sister Chapel is on permanent display at the Center for Art and Social Engagement, an initiative of the Rowan University Art Gallery in Glassboro, New Jersey.

Irene Peslikis was an American feminist artist, activist, and educator. She was one of the early founders and organizers in the women's art movement, especially on the east coast.

Martha Nilsson Edelheit, also known as Martha Ross Edelheit, is an American-born artist currently living in Sweden. She is known for her feminist art of the 1960s and 1970s, which focuses on erotic nudes.

Shirley Gorelick was an American figurative painter, printmaker, and sculptor. She "rejected both the extremes of nonobjectivity and photographic exactitude," choosing instead to use a range of sources that included photographs, live models, and her own sculpted life studies.

Eunice Golden is an American feminist painter from New York City, known for exploring sexuality using the male nude. Her work has been shown at the Whitney Museum of American Art, Brooklyn Museum, Bronx Museum of the Arts, Westbeth Gallery, and SOHO20 Gallery.

June Druiett Blum was a multimedia American artist who produced paintings, sculptures, prints, light shows, happenings, jewelry, art books, pottery, conceptual documentations, and drawings. She was also a feminist curator and activist who worked to advance the women's movement and increase visibility for women artists.

Susan Grabel is an American feminist artist. She spent part of her early adulthood in Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, where she nurtured her artistic pursuits. Grabel has described her work as being inspired by the realities of aging and the female body, and specializes in sculpture and art on paper such as collography.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marjorie Kramer</span>

Marjorie Kramer is a figurative painter of al fresco landscapes and feminist self-portraits.

Sharon Wybrants is an American painter, performance artist, and educator.

Sarah Yuster is an American painter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chicana art</span>

Chicana art emerged as part of the Chicano Movement in the 1960s. It used art to express political and social resistance through different art mediums. Chicana artists explore and interrogate traditional Mexican-American values and embody feminist themes through different mediums such as murals, painting, and photography. The momentum created from the Chicano Movement spurred a Chicano Renaissance among Chicanas and Chicanos. Artists voiced their concerns about opression and empowerment in all areas of race, gender, class, and sexuality. Chicana feminist artists and Anglo-feminist took a different approach in the way they collaborated and made their work during the 1970's. Chicana feminist artists utilized artistic collaborations and collectives that included men, while Anglo-feminist artists generally utilized women-only participants.Art has been used as a cultural reclamation process for Chicana and Chicano artists allowing them to be proud of their roots by combining art styles to illustrate their multi-cultured lives.

Marion Lorraine Ranyak was an American painter who lived and worked in Rye, New York, and was a founding member of SOHO20.

<i>SoHo 20 Gallery</i> (painting) 1974 diptych oil painting by Sylvia Sleigh

SoHo 20 Gallery is a diptych painting by American artist Sylvia Sleigh containing portraits of the collective members of the New York art gallery SoHo 20 Gallery. It is oil on canvas with each panel measuring 72" X 96". Sleigh also created a group portrait of the A.I.R. Gallery members. The Brooklyn Rail stated that the paintings could be "read today like detailed history paintings that record the birth of the Feminist Art Movement".

References

  1. Heller, Jules & Nancy G. (2013). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. Routledge. p. 359. ISBN   9781135638825.
  2. Lubell, Ellen (April 13, 1978). "Art Review". No. V. 5 No 28. SoHo Weekly News.
  3. Shirey, David L. (1 November 1981). "Art; The View from Within". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  4. Alloway, Lawrence (April 22, 1978). "Art Reviews". The Nation: 486.
  5. 40 Years of Women Artists at Douglass Library, The Roots of Creativity: Women Artists Year Six. "Center for Women in the Arts and Humanities". cwah.rutgers.edu. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 27 December 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. "Veteran Feminists of America. Records, 1993-2007: A Container List". oasis.lib.harvard.edu. Archived from the original on 4 April 2015. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  7. "Organization History". soho20gallery.com. Archived from the original on 15 November 2015. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  8. Ault, Julie, ed. (2002). Alternative Art New York, 1965-1985: A Cultural Politics Book for the Social Text Collective ([Nachdr.] ed.). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. p. 36. ISBN   978-0816637942.
  9. 1 2 Hottle, Andrew D. (2014). The Art of the Sister Chapel: Exemplary Women, Visionary Creators, and Feminist Collaboration. Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate Publishing. ISBN   978-1472421395.
  10. Borzello, Frances (1998). Seeing ourselves : women's self-portraits. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. ISBN   978-0810941885.
  11. Glueck, Grace (Nov 5, 1976). "Art People". New York Times.
  12. Johnston, Laurie (Jan 30, 1978). "The 'Sister Chapel': A Feminist View of Creation". New York Times.
  13. Brand, Peg Zeglin, ed. (2000). Beauty matters. Bloomington [u.a.]: Indiana Univ. Press. p. 241. ISBN   9780253213754.
  14. Langer, Sandra L. (Winter 1979). "The Sister Chapel: Towards a Feminist Iconography, with Commentary by Ilise Greenstein". The Southern Quarterly. 17 (2): 29–32.
  15. MacFarquhar, Larissa (March 15, 1993). "Ars Brevis". The New Yorker. p. 32.
  16. "Public Art at the World Trade Center". www.ifar.org.
  17. "CowParade New York, NY cow detail - Herd on the Street III: Blue Moo-n". newyork.cowparade.com. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05. Retrieved 2015-12-26.
  18. Mailman, Cynthia. "Highway Scene-Staten Island Museum". www.statenislandmuseum.org. Archived from the original on 20 December 2015. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  19. Sylvia Sleigh Collection. "Rowan University Art Gallery". www.rowan.edu.
  20. Fressola, Michael (November 24, 2015). "'Seen' it to believe it". The Staten Island Advance.
  21. Fressola, Michael (March 9, 2009). "Playing well together". Extirpated Species/Whispering Reed Villa/Summer. The Staten Island Advance.
  22. Broude, Norma; Garrard, Mary D., eds. (1994). The Power of Feminist Art: The American Movement of the 1970s, History and Impact. New York: Harry N. Abrams. ISBN   978-0810937321.
  23. "Claiming Space: Some American Feminist Originators". www.caareviews.org.
  24. Miller, Lynn F. (1981). Lives and Works: Talks with Women Artists . Metuchen N.J.: Scarecrow Press. ISBN   0810814587.
  25. Delbanco, Andrea (19 November 2000). "Playing in the Neighborhood". New York Times. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  26. Lovejoy, Margot; Paul, Christiane; Vesna, Victoria, eds. (2011). Context Providers: Conditions of Meaning in Media Arts. Bristol, UK: Intellect. p. 32. ISBN   978-1841503080.