Directory:Charles Fazzino

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Name: Charles Fazzino

Address: Museum Editions, Ltd. 32 Relyea Place
City: New Rochelle
State: NY
Zip: 10801
Country: USA
Phone: (914) 654-9370
Email: [mailto:dddgallery@aol.com dddgallery@aol.com]
Web: http://www.fazzino.com/
Contact: Charles Fazzino
Title: [[Key Person1 Title::Master of 3D Pop Art Template:OrphanCharles Fazzino is an American pop artist. An innovator in the 3D pop art style, his work is exhibited in hundreds of fine art galleries worldwide. A premiere events artist, he has commemorated nine Super Bowls for National Football League, and has been an official artist for the GRAMMY Awards, Country Music Awards, Major League Baseball All-Star Game, Indianapolis 500, The United States Olympic Team, National Hockey League All-Star Game, Daytime Emmy Awards, and more. ==Early Years== == Born in 1955, Charles Fazzino is the son of a Finnish sculptor (Irene) and an Italian mode shoe designer (Salvatore). He took his first formal art class as a 7th grader in 1967 and has his first solo art exhibition at Pelham High School in 1968. He often accompanied his mother to the arts and crafts shows in which she exhibited and in 1971, he put up his own display at the Bedford Hills Outdoor Arts Show, the first time he exhibited for the general public. He attended the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan and graduated with his bachelor of arts in 1977.

Artistic Technique

Charles Fazzino is most well-known for the three-dimensionality of his limited edition silkscreen serigraphs.

In 1980, while exhibiting in the juried arts fairs in Florida, Charles Fazzino attended a 3-D paper tole class in an arts supply store. He experimented with the technique and showed his first three-dimensional print at the Greenwich Village Art Show in New York City in May, 1980.

Fazzino entered the gallery circuit when he sold his first 3-D offset lithographs to a gallery in Michigan. He began using the silkscreen printing process in 1986.

The 3-D Process

1. Charles Fazzino sends his original line art to the silkscreen printer who then traces the line art onto a piece of mylar to create the black line screen. The printer pushes black ink through the screen to print the outline of the image onto paper.

2. The printer returns the outline to Charles Fazzino for adjustment and color indication.

3. Chromists interpret Charles Fazzino's original color scheme onto a series of screens and the color mixer matches the colors to Fazzino's original painting.

4. Each screen is placed on the printing press during which time the appropriate color ink is pushed through to the paper. The final image appears as each color is laid down on the paper. The order in which the colors are laid down determines the blends and effects that result in the final print.

5. The original image is printed both on 100% rag 2-ply or 4-ply museum board and on 100% rag 1-ply sheets. The elements of the image are cut out of the 1-ply sheets by hand using an exacto knife. The cutouts are carefully layered on top of the boards using a silicone material and resulting in a multi-layered image. The final stage involves the embellishment of each image with acrylic paint glitter and sometimes crystals.

References

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