I I I ittle Bo Peep has found her sheep and Humpty Dumpty has a Band-Aid in Sara Frank's version of Mother Goose. Frank, a West Bloomfield artist (shown right), recent- ly completed a 3-by-5 Mother Goose tile mural at the new West Bloomfield Township Public Library "I wanted to use the nursery rhyme characters in a new way," says Frank, whose colorful mural depicts Mother Goose flapping her wings and reading to all of her subjects. The mural con- sists of ten individual tiles connected in a jigsaw fashion instead of the tra- ditional grid-like tile pattern. Frank's foray into commercial tile design began as a hobby eight years ago. A flutist, with a degree from the University of Michigan in 1971, Frank decided to study at Pewabic Pottery in Detroit as a change. She began to pro- duce tiles for tables, fireplaces and backsplashes and exhibited her work at local galleries, like the Arnold Klein Gallery and the Andy Sharkey Gallery, both in Royal Oak. She recently pre- sented Isaac Stern with a special limit- ed-edition commemorative tile, com- missioned by the University Musical Society of Ann Arbor. The West Bloomfield Library com- missioned Frank after seeing her work in an Emerging Artists exhibit at the Janice Charach Epstein Museum/Gallery. "At first the library wanted everything for children, and I wanted to focus on one aspect," explains Frank. After many drafts, Frank chose Mother Goose for the children's section. In addition to the mural, other Mother Goose tiles are scattered throughout the room for young library visitors to discover. Copies of the individual tiles are sold exclusively at the library as a fund-raising project. • Left: Little Bo Peep tile is just one of a dozen nursery rhyme tiles scattered --Carla Schwartz PHOTOGRAPHY BY JOHN SOBCZAK, LORIEN STUDIO 1 2 • JULY 2000 • STYLE AT THE JN throughout the West Bloomfield Library children's section. Right: This 3x5 Mother Goose mural consists of individual tiles connected in jigsaw puzzle fashion.