Neural Supernovae
"Fanchon Fröhlich’s paintings are essentially neural, in that
their explosive delivery of colour maps out work that takes its direction
from inner landscapes given the form of abstract configuration. With
a background in linguistic philosophy and science, Fanchon began painting
at the Liverpool College of Art, largely as a figurative artist, before
her seminal involvement with the etcher S.W. Hayter’s Atelier
17 in Paris, an experience that radically challenged her formative
experiments with figurative painting, and transformed her into the
liberated proponent of abstract expressionism who we know today. Only
a small number of Fanchon’s early works have survived, but amongst
them is the achingly sensitive portrait of her late husband, the physicist,
Herbert Frohlich, shown here, as a superb example of her ability to
bring the complex inner thinker to light, so that we the viewer are
confronted directly with the man’s characteristic preoccupation
with thought processes, as his means of connecting with the quantum
universe by way of physics.
Part of Fanchon’s greatness lies in her ability to continually
reinvent herself as an artist. Her writings on philosophy, science
and art, her immense European culture, that also takes in the work
of the American abstract expressionists, as well as the Japanese influences
on her art, initiated by a period of work with Goto San in Kyoto, have
all combined over the years, to the continuous and lively remaking
of her art as the dominant expression of a life committed to imaginative
creativity.
In 1991, Fanchon always in search of the new founded the Collective
Phenomena, an art movement characterised by having several painters
working abstractly together on a surface that takes its force from
concentrated spontaneity within the participants, the activity often
being performed live to the accompaniment of Lawrence Ball’s
extempore piano music. The work of the Collective Phenomena, beautiful,
disturbing, powerfully conflicting and neurologically menacing, is
integral to the provocatively challenging retrospective of an artist
at last coming up for serious consideration as a major painter.
Fanchon’s connections to Liverpool too, as the concealed city
buried in the subtext to her art, forms another important aspect of
her creative growth as an artist, right from her early years of studying
at the Liverpool College of Art, to assimilating the city’s indigenous
culture into the textural density of her work as place, no matter how
abstractly overwritten. Her work, always celebratory in tone and driving
in energy, is the unstoppable example of an artist working with courage
at the edge, and one who is prepared to accept all experience as subject
matter for art, and to compound the risks proposed by pioneering into
adventurous experimentation. I would point for example to the painting
Visual Music V11 Lyrical Moon, a collaboration between Fanchon and
Sylvie Le Seac’h, as a superb instance of the collective method,
in which intense colour mixed with acute sensory experience, come together
as the fusion of energies instrumental to creating a spontaneous work
of visionary intensity. But for all Fanchon’s education in philosophic
and scientific disciplines, the work is never prohibitively cerebral,
but always moves seamlessly from mental conception to imaginative expression
without trace of interruption.
Almost entirely conceived in Liverpool, in a studio with aerospace-silver
walls, high up in her old 19th century house on Greenheys Road, Fanchon
Fröhlich who
works in a light peculiar to her adopted city, has produced a highly
original body of work, edgy, impacting, colourful, energised,
and totally, unapologetically the real thing."
Jeremy Reed
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