Jules Remedios Faye

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Jules Remedios Faye (born 1958) is an American author, editor, letterpress printmaker, bookbinder, teacher, and creator of artists’ books. With husband Christopher Stern she established Stern & Faye Printers, a letterpress print shop & hand bookbindery located in Mt Vernon, WA.[1] Faye teaches, curates and participates in bookarts exhibits and events throughout the Skagit Valley[2] and Puget Sound area.

Selected works[edit]

  • "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)

Selected artists' books[edit]

  • 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)
  • 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)
  • Water Dogs (1992)

References[edit]

  1. ^ Edwards, Haley (January 11, 2007). "Artist Christopher Stern had a passion for perfection". Seattle Times. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
  2. ^ "Out and About". Skagit Valley Herald. August 14, 2014. Retrieved June 8, 2015.

External links[edit]