Age, Biography and Wiki
Cyrilla Mozenter was born on 1947 in Newark, New Jersey, U.S., is a Cyrilla Mozenter is New York. Discover Cyrilla Mozenter's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 77 years old?
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77 years old |
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Newark, New Jersey, U.S. |
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United States
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1947.
She is a member of famous with the age 77 years old group.
Cyrilla Mozenter Height, Weight & Measurements
At 77 years old, Cyrilla Mozenter height not available right now. We will update Cyrilla Mozenter's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.
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Cyrilla Mozenter Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Cyrilla Mozenter worth at the age of 77 years old? Cyrilla Mozenter’s income source is mostly from being a successful . She is from United States. We have estimated Cyrilla Mozenter's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2024 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Timeline
Cyrilla Mozenter is a New York-based artist known for her hand stitched industrial wool felt freestanding and wall pieces that include the transplantation of cutout letters, letter-derived, and pictogram-like shapes, as well as her hybrid works on paper, incorporating drawing, writing, painting, and collage.
In the catalog for Endpapers: Drawings 1890-1900 and 1990-2000 at the Neuberger Museum of Art, curator Judy Collischan wrote, "Her unusual materials...suggest the margins of life that are erratic, unpredictable and capricious occurring in spite of our continual attempts to maintain order."
These works are made with double layers of handmade paper stitched together, in most cases, at the top edge.
The implied interior space eventually grew in volume, becoming actual in the freestanding structures of the More saints seen work.
As described by curator Jessica Hough:
Cyrilla Mozenter's small-scale sculptures, made primarily from cream-colored felt, have an elegance and spirituality that belies their material fabrication.
Felt—a textile of ancient origin used now in industry as well as children's crafts—along with discarded ice cream spoons, scavenged from urban sidewalks, speaks to the everyday; silk thread and carefully-placed pearls hint at the devotional quality with which the maker has imbued the objects.
The pencil lines and loose threads indicate the process by which the works were formed; the seams of the vessels, laid bare, reveal both the strength and vulnerability uniquely communicated by a sewn form.
The sculptures give the impression of surrogates for objects no longer present, as if the artist has resurrected them from a drawing of something lost to history.
Mozenter has continued with industrial wool felt and works on and with paper.
Pieces range from felt wall works, sometimes banner-like or larger, with the presence of tapestries, to freestanding constructions of either felt or paper with cardboard suggesting elemental architectural forms.
Mozenter's practice actively maintains a tension between form and medium, with a sustained focus on the inherent properties of a given material.
The artist has used the word devotional to describe the trying process of hand-stitching industrial wool felt.
Mozenter attended Pratt Institute, graduating with BFA and MFA degrees in 1970 and 1972.
Mozenter has worked with a variety of techniques and materials ranging from the ready-made to the hand-made as well as from the nearly imperceptible to the bold and graphic over the course of her career, however, her consistent focus has been described as the interior landscape of thought.
There is an emphasis on tactility, as her work has also been consistently process-oriented, involving a purposeful subversion of expectation with a concomitant striving for a quality of inevitability.
The artist considers her work as evidence of the experience of making it.
Between 1982 and 1990 Mozenter produced an extensive body of work in charcoal drawing.
She has described abandoning paint and soft brushes in favor of hard sticks of charcoal imagined as swords in an effort "to cut through."
From the resulting fields of gestural marks, a new vocabulary of pictogram-like shapes, icons of a symbolic and ambiguous nature emerged.
Many of these drawings are fifteen to eighteen feet long, necessitating the artist's physical immersion in the work itself.
The resulting fields of gestural marks comprise a visual tangle that can be seen as suggesting wool felt, the material the artist came to later and with which she is best known.
Myrtle leaves, allspice, arnica, beeswax, Chinese laundry soap, dried eggplant skins, walnuts, hazelnuts, fruit pits, string, lima beans, sugar cubes, thread, and peanuts are among the unlikely materials that Mozenter used in her work in the 1990s.
In her Art in America review, Janet Koplos brought attention to the work's directness and physicality, describing it as "an encounter with the real."
She mentions Mozenter's treatment of the small and commonplace as connoting value and suggesting an almost sacramental air through obsessive repetition.
An installation of this time entitled Homage to Francis Ponge (1990-1991) consists of soaps stolen from public bathrooms resting on rows of white linen runners placed directly on the floor—and an autobiographical text, Incidents of Soap Stealing in Various States in Mexico.
In Drawing Papers #8, curator Elizabeth Finch writes, "Mozenter speaks of the bar of soap as a renewable resource—solidly inert at one moment and luxuriously expansive the next—in perpetual re-creation despite or because of its eventual demise."
Robert Morgan establishes the installation's relationship to issues of object-ness in the work of the early Conceptualists and mentions the work's "concept and design, narration and its projection into a formal arrangement."
In addition to material concerns, Mozenter's practice concerns itself with the subject of language and literature, prominently with the work of Gertrude Stein.
Elizabeth Finch writes that, like Stein, Mozenter joins her reader/viewers in a "pact of the imagination, that allowed some things to remain joyfully unexplained, elusive. The opposite of expectation turns out just right."
Mozenter has been working with industrial wool felt since the late 1990s.
Felt first appeared in small beige bits as collage elements in works on paper along with Band-Aids, wooden ice cream spoons, toothpicks, and popsicle sticks.
The artist has used Stein's words directly in works on paper, but also as titles, notably of four exhibitions: Very well saint at The Drawing Center, (2000), Cuts and Occasions at Dieu Donné Papermill (2002), More saints seen at Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum (2005), warm snow at Adam Baumgold Gallery (2010), and warm snow: Sculpture in Two and Three Dimensions at Garrison Art Center (2014).
The writer's presence is felt as an underlying inspiration in Mozenter's oeuvre.
As critic Jonathan Goodman remarked in his Sculpture magazine review.
The drawings, like the sculptures, feel like they are the visual equivalent of Gertrude Stein's words, which possess a lyrical acuity all their own.
Mozenter's work shows us how Modernism may still be accessed in a postmodern world, for its forms build a relationship in which the art is supported by its references to other media.
In that sense, the work is remarkably open and expressive, living as it does between the directness of its own statement and its connection to another work of art.
Awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2020, her work is represented in many public collections including The Brooklyn Museum and The Yale University Art Gallery.