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Born in New York, NY, USA


MA, New York University

BA, Adelphi University

Art Students League

Brooklyn Museum School of Art

School of Chinese Brushwork

Hans Hofmann School of Art

Certificate, New York School of Interior Design

"My first one-person exhibition of oil paintings took place directly after my first son was born, in 1959. The next exhibition occurred after the birth of my second son. I changed my medium from oil painting on canvas to collage on paper to accommodate the demands of family life-a husband home for lunch every day and my desire to raise my children with minimum hiring of outside caregivers. Collage was a more practical medium for me as a mother of these two youngsters. I could leave and return to the work as time permitted, and there were no dangerous substances to spill or inhale.

Since those early times I have had 43 solo exhibitions here in the States and abroad. Those first exhibitions were during the "Tenth Street Days", when there were few women in "the boys' club". I was a member of one of the first coop galleries centered around that area. After the gallery openings the men went out drinking at the Cedar Bar. I was invited to come along. 1 went home to change diapers.

Abstract Expressionism was de rigueur in the fifties. I have always tried to push beyond that pure gestural approach, trying to bring other elements into my work, forming more surreal atmospheres. 1 continue to work in this manner today, exclusively on paper. I bring images of animals, fish, and people that I have appropriated from numerous sources into my pictures. I have returned to the use of collage as a means of including them. I present these components discretely, not randomly, as harmonizing entities within my compositions.

For many years I was devoted solely to printmaking. Currently I combine some printmaking techniques with my painting. I initiate each painting as if it were a monotype, painting an abstract design with oil-based ink on a large, rigid plastic sheet. Atop the ink picture T place a dampened sheet of Arches Cover paper. I transfer the image by means of pressure from a steam iron (back to the housewife). The paper is then clipped to a foam-core board resting on my easel. When the paper dries, I cover the underpainting with a heavy wash of tempera paint. With wet rags and sponges T subtract some of the color to permit glimpses, through transparency, of the deeper-lying strata of the oil-based design. Finally, 1 overdraw, employ collage, paint, and controlled drips and spatters to enhance the drama and complexity of this painting. My aim is to convey my joy in this combined medium through the uninhibited use of lusty brushwork, dazzling colors, elegant compositions, and dynamic forms along with the "gravity of humor". Humor plays an important role in my paintings, often disguising social comment although it may initially appear as just funny. It's more than that. Sometimes I do add an irrelevant element which is really just for fun.

Currently I work in my studio a minimum of 4 or 5 days per week for several hours each time.

My husband is still home for lunch.

My paintings are in numerous museum, public, and private collections."

Cecily Barth Firestein, November 2007



Read an Interview with Cecily Barth Firestein


  • Solo Exhibitions
  • 2007: Mona Lisa Gallery, Maplewood, NJ

  • 2006: Joseph Wahl Gallery, Woodland Hills, CA

  • 2005:
  • Phoenix Gallery, New York, NY

  • Adelphi University Manhattan Center Gallery, New York, NY

  • 2001: Phoenix Gallery, New York, NY

  • 2000: The Interchurch Center, New York, NY

  • 1999: Phoenix Gallery, New York, NY

  • 1998: International Visions Gallery, Washington, D.C.

  • 1996: Woodward Gallery, New York, NY

  • 1994: Phoenix Gallery, New York, NY

  • 1992: Fairleigh Dickenson University, NJ

  • 1989: Dome Gallery, New York, NY

  • 1987: Galeria de Arte ABEU, Copacabana, Brazil

  • 1985: Meissner Editions, Hamburg, Germany

  • 1984:
  • Centor del Bellas Artes, Caracas Venezuela

  • Manhattan Transfer, New York, NY

  • 1983: Hastings Gallery, Spanish Institute, New York, NY

  • 1981: South Street Seaport, New York, NY

  • 1980: Long Island University, Salena Gallery, New York, NY

  • 1978: Museum of the City of New York, New York, NY

  • 1975: Jewish Historical Society, New York, NY

  • 1973: Phoenix Gallery, New York, NY

  • 1971: Phoenix Gallery, New York, NY

  • 1968: Phoenix Gallery, New York, NY

  • 1964:
  • Phoenix Gallery, New York, NY

  • Adelphi University, Garden City, NY

  • 1962: Phoenix Gallery, New York, NY

  • Group Exhibitions
  • 2007: Maryland Federation of Art, Anapolis, MD

  • 2004:
  • Hunterdon Museum of Art, Clinton, NJ

  • Pfizer Galllery, New York, NY

  • 2003: Gwangju Biannual, Gwangju City, Korea

  • 1999:
  • City Without Walls, Newark, NJ

  • Casa Piedro, Santiago, Chile

  • 1998:
  • SAGA, New York, NY

  • Phoenix Gallery, New York, NY

  • Fresh Paint, Los Angeles, CA

  • 1997:
  • Gallery 10, Washington, D.C.

  • Conneticut Graphics Art Center, Norwalk, CT

  • 1995: Gola Gallery, New York, NY

  • 1993: Washington and Lee University, Lexington, VA

  • Public Collections
  • Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

  • Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY

  • Columbia Museum, Columbia, SC

  • Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, DE

  • Newark Museum, Newark, NJ

  • Freud Museum, London, UK

  • Freud Museum, Vienna Washington

  • Cincinnati Museum of Art, Cincinnati, OH

  • Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT

  • B'nai B'rith Klutznik National Jewish Museum, Washington, D.C.

  • Skirball Museum, Los Angeles, CA

  • Avery Architecture/Fine Arts Building, Columbia University, New York, NY

  • New York Public Library, New York, NY

  • Deutsche Bank, West Germany

  • J.P. Morgan Bank, Los Angeles, CA

  • Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, NY

  • Selection of paintings from Cecily Barth Firestein


    Read the guestbook of Cecily Barth Firestein

    Sign the guestbook of Cecily Barth Firestein


  • Award for Printmaking 2000 and The Eliabeth Stanton Blake Memorial Award, National Association of Women Artists

  • Merit Scholarship, Brooklyn Museum School of Fine Art

  • Artist-in-Residence, Bronx Museum of History, New York, NY

  • Grant Award, New York Sate Council on the Arts


  • Read what the press is saying about Cecily Barth Firestein

  • The World of the Working Artist, May/June 1999, New York "Cecily Barth Firestein's Brilliant Figurative Breakthrough".