Memorial: NYC, Sun., July 19 -- Celebrate life of Irving Fierstein, people's artist
The International Action Center in New York will host a memorial for
people’s artist Irving Fierstein on Sunday, July 19, from 3-6 p.m. at 55
W. 17th St., 5th floor. The memorial will include speeches, cultural
performances and photo displays of Fierstein’s revolutionary art. Food
and refreshments will be provided. Call 212-633-6646 for more information.
By Sue Davis
(See photos of some of his artwork below)
For the better part of the last 75 years, revolutionary
peoples’ artist Irving Fierstein used his immense talent to depict the
many struggles of working and oppressed people for social and economic justice
and against imperialism. In the early 1980s Fierstein created a unique genre of
art—striking full-color revolutionary banners thoughtfully composed and
painstakingly painted by hand. Hundreds of Fierstein’s banners provided
visual focal points in countless marches and rallies in New York and elsewhere
for more than two decades.
Fierstein painted his first banner in 1980 when Alexander Haig attempted to
seize control of the government. A picture of the banner depicting Haig atop a
menacing tank yelling, “I’m in charge,” was carried in dozens
of newspapers across the country. Since then, Fierstein painted banners against
Reagan cutbacks, affirming lesbian, gay, bi and transgender rights, Jersey City
housing struggles, protests against police violence, and any number of U.S.
invasions.
Perhaps the most famous image he created was for a 1987
New Years greeting card of two Black fists breaking chains imposed over a map
of Africa with the slogan “Free South Africa.” Not only was the
design also used on banners, buttons and placards, but the image was adopted
all over the world to symbolize the struggle against apartheid. Monica
Moorehead, a founder of the U.S. Out of Southern Africa Network, commented,
“Irving’s powerful Free South Africa image truly captured the
spirit of this heroic national liberation struggle. The image became an
important part of mass culture as well, as it appeared in the movies
‘School Daze’ and ‘Cry Freedom’ and also on the front
cover of Esquire.”
Fierstein’s art appear on leaflets and other
printed materials. But Fierstein’s activism didn’t end there. The
artist was often the first one on a picket line or at a meeting.
In 2001 Sara Flounders, an International Action Center
co-coordinator in New York, organized an exhibit to show the range of his art
work. “It was a spectacular exhibit,” Flounder commented.
“The walls of the large IAC Center on 14th Street were covered with
paintings expressing rage at the bankers and CEOs, pain for the millions
starving during the Iraq Sanctions, the power of the Black Liberation struggle,
and the chaos of capitalist plunder interspersed with banners of past
demonstrations.
“Working with Irving on planning what to display
and how to fit it in the IAC brought back years of struggle and street
confrontations.” His daughter Laurie Fierstein, an organizer of Youth
Against War & Fascism, Women United for Action and Workers World, said that
the show “meant a lot to him.”
Anti-Zionist Jewish fighter
Born of Polish and Rumanian Jewish immigrant parents in
1915, Fierstein discovered his talent and love of art while a youth in
Williamsburg, Brooklyn. He studied art and architecture at the Hebrew Technical
Institute, but, unable to find work in his field, he turned to commercial art
at Cooper Union. He also studied fine art at the Art Students’ League and
the National Academy of Design, where he won an award in 1937.
Like many youth during the Great Depression, Fierstein
joined the progressive movement. In 1935 he attempted to organize a Commercial
Artists and Designers Union and helped to paint a giant Times Square billboard
in support of Spanish Civil War anti-fascist freedom fighters in 1938. During
that time he became active in the Communist Party.
In 1948 Fierstein took a principled stand when U.S. and
British imperialism, working with the Zionist movement, occupied Palestine to
set up the Israeli settler state. He was vocal in defense of the Palestinian
people’s right to their homeland, which was highly unusual for someone
raised Jewish. Even though that meant opposing the international socialist
movement, which at the time nearly unanimously supported the Israeli state,
Fierstein never wavered in his support for the rights of Palestinian
people.
Fierstein resumed his art studies in the 1960s when he
learned of the beating of civil rights activist Fanny Lou Hamer in a
Mississippi jail. His oil of that shameful event painted in 1969 now hangs in
the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Social Change in Atlanta. Over the years
his oils, acrylics, lithographs, etching and mixed media were exhibited at
several fine art New York galleries. This father of four continued to paint
into his 90s.
A dedicated chess player, jazz aficionado and
vegetarian cook, Fierstein was an accomplished athlete. At age 74 he won gold
medals in racewalk races and finished first in his age category in the New York
City Marathon. In his 80s Fierstein battled cancer with the same vengeance he
pursued politics. He died from respiratory failure on May 25 at age 94.
Fierstein’s contributions to the many struggles
he portrayed are legendary. They will be remembered by his many friends,
movement allies and family on July 19 in New York’s Solidarity Center.
Irving Fierstein, presente!
Go to the link, http://irving-fierstein.com/, to sign the
People’s Guest Book for Irving Fierstein and to get more information on
the July 19th memorial.