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Cats (and their Dykes) by Irene Reti
Cats (and their Dykes) by Irene Reti











Cats (and their Dykes) by Irene Reti Cats (and their Dykes) by Irene Reti

It features interviews with fine printers Jack Stauffacher and George Kane, who taught at the Press, as well as with former students Aaron Johnson, Peggy Gotthold, Felicia Rice, and Tom Killion, who have gone on to have illustrious careers in the book arts. His oral history, conducted and edited by book arts scholar and UCSC alumnus Gregory Graalfs, focuses on the history and impact of the Cowell Press at UCSC's Cowell College.

Cats (and their Dykes) by Irene Reti

She also met well-known figures such as Erich Fromm and Daiset Suzuki, and the archive contains photographs of Rufino Tamayo, Dolores del Rio, Alma Reed, architect Juan O'Gorman, and the clowns Firulais and Cantinflas. Goldring was especially intrigued by Lacondonian and Chomula cultures. On her own, she roamed through open markets and mountain towns with her camera, unobtrusively capturing rituals, such as children floating candles on water on the night of el Dia de los Muertes (the Day of the Dead), and services at a tiny Jewish temple in Venta Prieta. She was sent to schools and monasteries, psychiatric hospitals and rural villages. She then worked on assignment for Mexican magazines, such as Gente and Claudia, as well as for local newspapers and non-profit organizations such as Planned Parenthood. Initially, she did photographic portraits of children.

Cats (and their Dykes) by Irene Reti

Her photography enabled her to support herself and gave her an avenue into the local culture. In 1954, newly divorced and with two children, Goldring flew to Mexico, despite not speaking Spanish, and knowing no one there. She eventually earned a Masters in Art from Teachers College of Columbia University. Two of these pieces appeared in The New Yorker magazine under the name Alice Reiner. Through these years Goldring was rarely without her sketchbook, and developed a beautiful abbreviated ink style capturing the character of people, boats and buildings in Manhattan. She majored in art at Brooklyn College and also studied photography and other forms of art at the American Artists' School in Manhattan. A finding aid to that collection is available at Īlissa Goldring was born Alice Berman in lower Manhattan in 1921 and knew from an early age that she wanted to be an artist. It is intended as a guide and supplement to Goldring's Mexican photos, slides and negatives, now preserved in the Special Collections Department of the UCSC Library. This oral history, conducted by Lizzy Gray of the Regional History Project, centers on the photographs Goldring took in Mexico between 19.













Cats (and their Dykes) by Irene Reti