Trish Franey Helps Kids Tap Into Their Imagination - 27 East

Arts & Living

Arts & Living / 1329197

Trish Franey Helps Kids Tap Into Their Imagination

icon 2 Photos
Trish Franey KYRIL BROMLEY

Trish Franey KYRIL BROMLEY

Trish Franey KYRIL BROMLEY

Trish Franey KYRIL BROMLEY

author on Feb 26, 2019

An apron can’t cover Trish Franey’s paint-splattered clothes after teaching a children’s art class at the Golden Eagle last week. Painting tiny birdhouses, fit for hummingbirds, she asked the kids, “Does anyone want eyeballs on their house?”“No, the birds will get scared!” one child answers.

She doesn’t talk down to the kids, but inevitably her dark humor flies over their heads. “No one gets my jokes,” she laughed.

“The kids are learning. They’re getting a piece of me, and I love that,” she said later during lunch at Rowdy Hall. “I want kids to be in the moment. That’s all we really have, is the moment.”

It brings her joy to see the kids tap into their imagination and creativity. “I love to see kids in their zone, no technology, no television,” she said.

Ms. Franey grew up a tomboy in northern New Jersey, with three older brothers and one younger sister, and attended parochial school, all themes in her work.

“I excelled at gym and art,” she said. “Back then, they didn’t know what dyslexia was, and I think that was my challenge, scholastically.”

Another challenge was her buck teeth. “My nickname was Bucky. It was horrible,” she said of the bullying. “It’s been going on forever, but it seems like it’s just getting attention now.”

“Prom Night,” her latest work, for Guild Hall’s 81st Artist Members Exhibition, opening Saturday, March 9, features five creatures who may not have buck teeth but do hark back to her school days.

“‘Prom Night’ is inspired by not getting asked to the senior prom, and all the girls that did, many of them mean girls,” she said. “I didn’t fit in but went to the prom anyway with a friend. I guess that’s why I painted them as monsters.”

Another work, “Cylinder Sally,” is a porcelain doll dressed in lace, fitted inside a rusted muffler pipe. Ms. Franey cut holes for her face and limbs.

“When I look at my work, it is a powerful force of healing from my childhood. It’s therapy for me to put my pain and frustration on canvas,” she said. “What a blessing. I have a colossal amount of gratitude to have this gift.”

Some people enjoy her work and find it whimsical and twisted. Others just find it twisted. “Good or bad, that’s my art,” she said.

Her artwork is considered “mixed medium, outsider art.” She is self taught. In fact, she didn’t start painting until she went to a show of 19 women artists curated by the late Vito Sisti at Ashawagh Hall, 17 years ago. “I want to do that,” she told herself at the time.

“I liked the vibe and the culture of it,” she said of the Springs art scene. “It was nice and not pretentious.” She sold out her first show there, which she called her “Ned and Bingo” series, a “funky” looking guy and his dog in different settings.

Her creative process is just as organic as her career. If she sees a rusted bottle cap in the road, she may use it for a detail on a canvas. She might smash a porcelain doll and use her eyeballs. “If I’m on the beach and find rope, I’ll cut it up and use it as texture for a duck or a maybe a dog,” she said.

She never uses a paintbrush. She uses her fingers to push French pastels that soften in water onto the canvas. “I stay in a soft pastel. I like warm colors,” she said. “I don’t use primary colors.”

She will use a pencil to sketch out a form, which she did during her time at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City where she studied fashion design and won top awards for it. But the stick-like figures of fashion are the antithesis of her artwork now.

After college, she worked for Guess Jeans in New York and was transferred to Los Angeles, but the West Coast was not a good fit. Back in New York, she got a job with Esprit. While skiing on the East Coast, she met her future husband, whose family had a home in East Hampton.

In 1998, the couple had an opportunity to purchase a wine shop in Springs, across the street from the Pollock-Krasner House, and they jumped at it.

“That was the rise and demise of my marriage,” she said. “We have two different personality types. He’s an oenophile. That’s his gift. He’s brilliant at it. I’m an artist,” she said, intently contemplating her iced tea.

Ms. Franey admitted she would rather glue corks to the sides of the wall than focus on sales, which didn’t bode well for the business or the marriage. When the couple divorced in 2006, she found herself the sole owner of Springs Wines & Liquors. “I’m blessed to have good workers at the wine shop,” she said.

More than anything, she is most proud of her daughter, who is 23 years old and close to home after attending college. “The best thing to happen to me was Raphaelle, for sure,” she said.

There were dark times when the only thing she could focus on was her health. She contracted Lyme disease and didn’t get better after treatment. Eventually, the Mayo Clinic diagnosed her with fibromyalgia. She believes that her Lyme was never cured, however. “It lays dormant and when you’re exhausted, run down or stressed out, it resurfaces,” she said. “It’s debilitating.”

Then, she had a spiritual awakening. “It wasn’t a moment like the skies opening,” she said.

“It was a very dark time of my life. Not being able to be myself, the self that I love.”

“My passion, my love for life was ripped from me. I try not to use the word depression. It was a manic funk,” she said.

For years, there was no artwork, or teaching. “I couldn’t function,” she said. “I was ready to sell the store, sell the house, and move back to New Jersey.”

Part of managing the disease was cutting toxic people out of her life, “even family.” But mostly, the road back to her health and her spirituality included a combination of walking her dog, Winston, a rescue from Last Chance Animal Rescue in Southampton, and praying.

Instead of going to church, she heads into Mother Nature. “I pray in the woods. I don’t get on my knees. I’m walking the dog,” she said.

Her favorite hike is Shadmoor State Park. “The cliffs of Montauk, overlooking the ocean—I’m sorry, it doesn’t get better than that,” she insists.

“No cellphone, just me and nature,” she said. “Being able to do that lets me think about what I have to do to get better.”

She has a lot of big plans. She’s in the process of writing not one, but two books. “The Adventures of Billy Bean Butt,” is an “interactive” children’s book. “Billy is a bully,” she said, bringing up a photo of Billy on her phone. “He has a mischievous face.”

The other book, “The Magic Turtle,” was inspired by her neighbor’s child who loves turtles but is not allowed to own one as a pet. “The magic turtle closes his eyes and wakes up in different places like Paris and learns about the culture,” she said.

Ms. Franey’s 1965 AirStream Bambi, which she calls “Rat Boy Production,” features prominently in her plans to host art classes for children. “I don’t do adults,” she said firmly. One goal is to take “Rat Boy” on the road, to visit hospitals and teach chronically ill children art classes.

“The world needs more love and kindness,” she said. “My mantra is ‘find your tribe.’”

You May Also Like:

LTV Studios' On the Screen Presents Two Films

On Friday, April 11, at 7:30 p.m. the On the Screen series at LTV Studios will present “Footsteps on the Wind” and “No Fear, No Favor” as part of “Women Rising: Stories of Strength and Change,” a film program curated by filmmaker Annette Danto, chair of the Brooklyn College Film Department, that celebrates the resilience, courage and determination of women both in front of and behind the camera. The films are being shown in honor of Women’s History Month. The cinematic journey showcases women from diverse backgrounds whose journeys inspire hope for the future and change for the better. “Footsteps ... 3 Apr 2025 by Staff Writer

‘Yellow Brick Road’ Is a Tribute to Elton John

On Saturday, April 12, The Suffolk presents two performances of “Yellow Brick Road,” a tribute ... 2 Apr 2025 by Staff Writer

Catalyst Quartet Performs on Shelter Island

The Shelter Island Friends of Music will present the Grammy Award-winning Catalyst Quartet in a ... 1 Apr 2025 by Staff Writer

BCM Welcomes the Danish String Quartet to Kick Off Its Spring Series

This is the time of year when Marya Martin, founder and artistic director of Bridgehampton ... by Annette Hinkle

Book Review: Kevin Wade’s Crime Novel 'Johnny Careless' Delves Into the World of Small Town Police Work

The insider world of Kevin Wade’s crime novel “Johnny Careless” will not surprise fans of ... by Joan Baum

‘Architecture of the Overflow’ With Emily Johnson at The Church

Have a seat on one of the many quilts that will be laid out in ... by Staff Writer

Fourth Annual Creativity Conference at The Church

On Saturday, April 5, The Church will host its fourth annual Creativity Conference. The daylong event begins with coffee and breakfast for all attendees at 9:30 a.m. A lunch break will be offered from noon to 1 p.m. (lunch not included). Composer Carter Burwell will lead off the presentations at 10 a.m. with “Why do films have music.” Burwell worked for years scoring Coen Brothers films and won an Academy Award for scoring Todd Haynes’s “Carol.” He also received nominations for “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” and “The Banshees of Inisherin.” Next up will be Lucy Jacobs, a magnetic speaker ... 31 Mar 2025 by Staff Writer

Sag Harbor's Peter Browngardt's Makes His First Looney Tunes Feature

Just a few weeks ago, Peter Browngardt, a creator, writer, executive producer and director of ... by Annette Hinkle

'Writing From Art: Poetry, Prose and the Lyric Essay'

Explore the possibilities of creative writing and develop new connections between visual art and the written word in a two-session workshop at The Church on Tuesday, April 8, and Thursday, April 10. Led by published poet and scholar Star Black, this two-session literary workshop will focus on the idea of ekphrasis, an Ancient Greek term meaning “the use of detailed description of a work of visual art as a literary device.” Inspired by the works featured in “Eternal Testament,” the current exhibition at The Church, participants will generate a series of creative texts detailing their unique experiences of selected pieces ... by Staff Writer

April Gornik Discusses ‘Figures du Fou’

On Sunday, April 27, join artist April Gornik for a richly illustrated virtual walk-through of the “Figures du Fou” (Figures of the Fool) exhibition that opened on October 16, 2024 at the Louvre Museum and closed on February 5, 2025. The talk begins at 3 p.m. “Figures of the Fool” was brilliantly curated by Elisabeth Antoine-König and Pierre-Yves Le Pogam. Gornik will share slides, talk about the curators’ intent and introduce her own insights and ideas. Along the way, she will invite thoughts and comments from the audience and, at the end, there will be a more formal question-and-answer period. ... by Staff Writer