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Romano, Clare

Trained as a painter at Cooper Union, Clare Romano made her first prints—lithographs—at Robert Blackburn’s Creative Lithographic Workshop in 1949. Her early urban subjects were replaced by landscapes when she left New York City for New Jersey, Truro, and Provincetown, where she and her family lived and spent their summers. She also switched her allegiance to the woodcut, developing imagery first in her paintings and drawings. Romano’s woodcuts show her appreciation for the texture of the wood block, and her penchant for creating a varied printed surface. In 1958, while in Italy on a Fulbright Grant, she began to use cardboard and paper to build her relief plates, and during a residence in Yugoslavia with the U.S. Information Agency in 1965–66, she perfected the collagraph technique, whereby she collaged materials (cardboard, cloth, found objects) onto the printing plate with a thick gesso or built up form with modeling paste. Romano has introduced generations of students to all aspects of printmaking as a professor at the New School, Pratt Graphics Center, and Pratt Institute, and as co-author with her husband, John Ross, of several important printmaking handbooks.


   

"Grand Canyon" Colored Print By Clare Romano
"Dark Canyon" Print In Color By Clare Romano
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