Moving onto Quilts
After her youthful foray into clothing her dolls, Fran’s first real strides towards serious fibre arts were with quilting. Part of the appeal, she admits, was the lack of rules, “That reason that I got into quilting was that there were hardly any rules.” As with her doll’s clothes, Fran enjoyed the luxury of ignoring the backing on her quilts, “You don’t have to put a backing on; it could be a false back to cover up all of the crazy stitching and the knotting and all that stuff. I’m not very rule-oriented, so the precision quilting never really appealed to me.”
‘Skins’
Fran enjoyed quilting but eventually moved on to flexible wall hangings. “Not only am I messy, but I’m also lazy,” she says, “And art quilting takes quite a lot of time. I did art quilting for about 10 years. And my maximum outlay was maybe five quilts a year. I wanted to speed things up, and I also wanted to have a product that would sell through an art gallery.”
After being offered wall space at a gallery in Santa Fe, Fran came up with what she calls, Skins. “I call them skins,” Fran says, “because the main component was fabric, but I stiffened the fabric and stretched it, and it became a flexible fabric piece that could be treated more like a painting. It was covered with an acrylic medium, so even though it was still fabric, it was a super cross between an art quilt and a painting.”
Art and the Abstract
“I would never even attempt realism,” Fran explains. I don’t think I would enjoy it. I don’t think I could do a good job with it. My brain is adapted to abstract because I like surprises. And that’s what truly drives me in my artwork; the ‘what if’ factor and abstract give plenty of that. It’s endless, truly endless, what you can layer and discover.”
Whether looking at her own work or enjoying the work of others, Fran doesn’t believe in searching for the literal. “I know people in my life who need to see something, and I try to discourage them if they’re in my presence,” she says, “I ask them to hold it down because it’s a little distracting. I see it in its entirety as an expression of art. For me, it doesn’t require any understanding other than what it feels like to the person that’s looking at it. Occasionally I have seen an object in my piece, and I try to ignore it!”