Stitching the fault lines
Dangerous fault lines become something entirely else in the hands of Jessie Homer French, whose show “Mapestries” opens Sunday at the Armory Center for the Arts in Pasadena.
French’s hand-stitched tapestries are made of fabric, thread, paint and ink. Using maps given to her by a seismologist at USC, French diagramed California fault lines including the San Andreas, Hollywood, San Gabriel and Santa Monica.
The 16 works on view contain landmarks and symbols to express the areas through which the fault lines stretch. The Capitol Records building in Hollywood, for example. Or a marijuana leaf and Mt. Shasta in Northern California.
“I use whatever fault lines are in the areas that I want to map, and whatever is there, I try to make as accurate as possible,” says French, a La Quinta resident who calls herself a “regional narrative artist.” She says she has long created work, often paintings, inspired by the places she has lived.
French was born in New York but came to Southern California in the early ’70s. She moved to Canada in 1996 and then to Oregon in 2005 before heading south again.
Once back in California, French began taking note of all the paintings and books that residents keep above their beds.
“I thought, ‘Whoa, maybe that’s not such a good idea,’ ” she says. That’s how she started making her mapestries: art that will do no harm in the next temblor.
The exhibition, funded by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, runs through May 15.