{"id":105648,"date":"2018-01-15T19:21:35","date_gmt":"2018-01-15T19:21:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/designwire\/10-questions-with-mary-fisher\/"},"modified":"2022-12-02T15:13:40","modified_gmt":"2022-12-02T20:13:40","slug":"10-questions-with-mary-fisher","status":"publish","type":"id_news","link":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/designwire\/10-questions-with-mary-fisher\/","title":{"rendered":"10 Questions With\u2026 Mary Fisher"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Mary Fisher<\/a> made history when she delivered one of the greatest American speeches of the 20th century, A Whisper of AIDS<\/em>, at the 1992 Republican National Convention in Houston. Joining the ranks of Martin Luther King Jr.’s I Have a Dream <\/em>and Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s The Four Freedoms<\/em>, Fisher’s emotional testimony revealed her recent HIV-positive diagnosis and urged the public to treat the then-burgeoning AIDS crisis with knowledge and compassion. She has since become an outspoken activist, founding both the Family AIDS Network and Clinical AIDS Research and Education Fund<\/a> while authoring six books. <\/p>\n But Fisher’s true passion has always been creativity—and its power to inspire, heal, and bring people together. Although most renowned for fiber art and textiles, her talents encompass photography, sculpture, and prints, among other media. A recent fabric collection for Lee Jofa’s Groundworks<\/a> line helps raise funds for the Design Industry Foundation Fighting AIDS (DIFFA)<\/a>, and an upcoming exhibit, “Textile Meditations: Mary & Friends<\/a>,” showcases her work alongside four fellow fiber artists. Held at the Armory Art Center<\/a> in West Palm Beach, Florida, until February 10, the exhibit will include a never-before-seen body of work titled Words to Silence<\/em>. Below, Fisher shares her earliest experiments with textiles, how her art and activism intersect, and how her landmark speech holds up today.<\/p>\n Interior Design Where did you grow up, and how did it influence your work? <\/strong><\/p>\n Mary Fisher: Mostly in the Detroit area. My father admired art, and my mother had a keen sense of style and design. I attended Kingswood<\/a>, one of the Cranbrook<\/a> schools, and in my early teens I found myself working on a loom. That loom became a safe place for me in a turbulent world. My studio is that safe place now, a half-century later, where I go to get beyond today’s chaos.<\/p>\n ID: What were some of your earliest experiments with textiles and how do they compare to your work today?<\/strong><\/p>\n MF: I made things for friends and for my mother. A few years later, I started a business selling artisan-produced textiles and some of my own designs. But what was most important about the loom is that it provided a place where I could be alone and where I could lose myself in the act of creativity. I hadn’t known that was possible before. At that loom decades ago, and in my studio today, I’m allowed the sacred privilege of creating. <\/p>\n ID: You recruited four friends—Jan Beaney<\/a>, Jean Littlejohn<\/a>, Jane Dunnewold<\/a>, and Marsha Christo<\/a>—to exhibit works for “Textile Meditations,” alongside your own. Tell me more about the show.<\/strong><\/p>\n