Naomi Siegmann

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City at Night, an artwork by Siegmann in Guanajuato.

Naomi Siegmann (1933 – 28 February 2018) was an American artist who developed her career in Mexico, and was noted for her depiction of everyday objects outside their normal contexts.[1] She began her career after she moved to Mexico with her family, learning to carve wood. She worked in this medium for about twenty years, before moving on to other materials, including recycled ones, in part due to her concerns for the environment. During her career, she had solo exhibits in Mexico and the United States, with participation in collective exhibits in these countries and Europe. She has been commissioned to create monumental works in Mexico and the United States. Her work has been recognized through membership in the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana.

Siegmann was born in New York in 1933. In 1960, she moved with her husband and two small children to the small town of Santa Rosa de Múzquiz in Coahuila because of her husband's work in mining.[2][3] After reading many books, she decided she needed to do something with her hands, so she started as a self-taught clay modeling. Later she learned basic wood-carving procedures from her sister.[2][4]

She went back to Mexico City for a 5-year contract his husband was attached to, but this would be her definitive decision because they stayed living in Mexico from then on.

Her first artistic training was in the Mexico City's workshop of sculptor Tosia Malamud, which was later complemented with a workshop with Enrique Miralda and travels to East Africa, Japan, South America and Europe.[2] She has since lived and worked in Mexico.[5][4]

She died on February 28, 2018, in Mexico City due to pneumonia complications. A few weeks before her death she had suffered a fall and a broken hip, and she could not fully recover from a lung deficiency.

Career

Artistry

References

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