Jules Remedios Faye
Jules Remedios Faye (born 1958) is an American author, editor, letterpress printmaker, bookbinder, teacher, and creator of artists’ books. Faye is known for establishing, with Christopher Stern, Stern & Faye Printers, a letterpress print shop & hand book bindery located in Mt. Vernon, Washington.[1] Faye teaches, curates and participates in book arts exhibits and events throughout the Skagit Valley[2] and Puget Sound area.[3]
Career
At age 17, Faye apprenticed to a letterpress job shop in San Francisco. She worked several years in commercial print shops throughout San Francisco and Seattle before founding Stern & Faye Printers with her partner Christopher Stern in 1994.[3] Her initial imprint established in 1990 was Street of Crocodiles Letterpress Printery.[4]
According to John D. Berry, "When they [Stern & Faye] moved out of Seattle in 1994, they settled in the rural Skagit Valley and set up what they referred to as a “printing farm,” with a barn full of working presses and typesetting equipment. Separately and together, they have produced an impressive body of printed work. What’s unique may be their combination of “fine press” sensibility and a freewheeling approach to typography and art." [4]
Selected artists' books
- De Todos Corazon. (2015)
- The Infant Sun Within. (2012)
- Sacred Vehicle. (2012)
- Fallen Angels: A Gallery of Wood & Linoleum Cuts by Twenty Artists Accompanied by a Tale as Told to Jules Remedios Faye. (1999) (With Chris Stern)[4]
- The Ladies Printing Bee: An Anthology of Thirty-Nine Letterpress Printers Addressing the Subject of Women’s Work. (1995) (Intro by Sandra Kroupa)
- The Annunciation: An Allegorical Tale of the Virgin as Warrior & Protectress: To Be Used as a Portable Alter. (1993)
- The Mechanical Dreamer: Il Sognatore Meccanico : A Fabulous Tale of Italian Dreams Told in Linoblocks Cut During the Perseid Meteor Showers (1993)[5]
- Water Dogs (1992)
Publications
- "The Café of the Beautiful Assassins." Fantasy Macabre issue 10 (1988) edited by Jessica Amanda Salmonson
- "The Promenade of Misshapen Animals." Fantasy Macabre, issue 11 (1988)
- "Pandora Pandaemonia." In What Did Miss Darrington See? : An Anthology of Feminist Supernatural Fiction (1989) (Edited by Jessica Amanda Salmonson)
- "A Light from Out of Our Heart." In Tales By Moonlight II (1989) (Edited by Jessica Amanda Salmonson)
- Wisewomen and Boggy-Boos: A Dictionary of Lesbian Fairy Lore (1992) (Editor. With Jessica Amanda Salmonson)
- The Mysterious Doom: And Other Ghostly Tales of the Pacific Northwest (1992) (With Jessica Amanda Salmonson)
References
- ^ Edwards, Haley (January 11, 2007). "Artist Christopher Stern had a passion for perfection". Seattle Times. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- ^ "Out and About". Skagit Valley Herald. August 14, 2014. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
- ^ a b "About". C.C. Stern Type Foundry. Retrieved 2024-07-16.
- ^ a b c Berry, John D. (July 16, 2024). "Mix & Match". dot-font: Letterpress in the Digital Age. Retrieved July 16, 2024.
- ^ Berona, Davida (2002). "Artists Without Authors". The California Printmaker. 1 (1): 9–15 – via academia.edu.
External links
- Beronä, David A. "Artists Without Authors: The Wordless Novels of Helena Bochorakova, Babette Katz, Barabara Henry, and Jules Remedios Faye." The California Printmaker: The Journal of the California Society of Printmakers (2002)
- Berry, John D. "TypeCon Port L'ampersand." Easily Amused (September 19, 2013)
- Berry, John D. "dot-font: Letterpress in the Digital Age." CreativePro.com (March 1, 2004)
- TypeCon Speaker Profile