Literature: Llewellyn, Sacha, et al. Women Only Works on Paper. Liss Llewellyn, 2021, p. 88.
Frances Richards was a multi-talented artist working variously as a painter, draughtswoman, fresco artist,
potter, embroiderer, sculptor, teacher and poet. Soon after completing her scholarship at the Royal College
of Art in 1930, Richards received her first professional commission when Stanley Morison, the founder of
the Monotype Corporation, asked her to provide a series of lithographs inspired by The Twelve Acts of the
Apostles. With their clean and delicate lines and touching evocation of mood and atmosphere, these early
works are characteristic of the simple lyricism that would define Richard’s graphic art and would still be in
evidence half a century later in compositions such as Hieratic Floral Figure.
Throughout her life Richards’ had a deep love of poetry and was particularly affected by the visionary
symbolism of Arthur Rimbaud. The year after producing Hieratic Floral Figure she executed a set of lithographs,
published by the Curwen Press, inspired by Rimbaud’s Les Illuminations which were first published in 1886.
Depicting figures in dream-like landscapes, the illustrations reveal the artist’s love of early Renaissance
painting, in particular the work of Fra Angelico.
A copy of this lithograph, in its final state, is in the collection of Tate.