SICA, AMERICAN (1932 - )
Sica's works express themes revealed in her personal observation of different cultures, both ancient and contemporary. She believes that the artist, acting as an individual, must seek out the deeply rooted aspects of civilization and communicate this vision.
Working in her Chelsea studio, Sica is totally involved in every aspect of creating her prints and constructions from the inception to the finished piece. She often employs metallic surfaces in experimental and inventive ways. Tactile effects of relief and texture are achieved by various means such as inking, stitching, and shaping the surface.
Fragments of the artist's own experience appear and reshape themselves, revealing the many threads that are woven together from her travels and daily life. Simple everyday objects appearing in Sica's work are given the sanctity of ritual objects in an ancient society.
Reflected in the work is the artist's concept of the interconnection between our modern culture and the mythological sea into which runs the roots of humanity's collective unconscious.
The very essence of the creative act is an implicit commitment to the future. Forged intuitively from the materials of our present, Sica's works express her belief that a viable human future can only be built upon the present, based on a better and clearer understanding of our past and an awareness of our relationship to it.