Amelia’s Magazine | Sirens: an interview with artist Rosie Emerson

Rosie Emerson Capella edition 1 of 5 by Rosie Emerson, Cyanotype, 42 x 61 cm

Capella edition 1 of 5, Cyanotype, 42 x 61 cm

Rosie Emerson explores the ancient form of Cyanotype printing in her new Sirens’ show at the Hang Up Gallery, with a series of 18 works ranging in size from 12cm up to 6ft. Here she explains more about the extraordinary techniques employed in her beautiful artworks and what she looks for in the models she works with. She also shares some sage advice for all aspiring artists.

Portrait of Rosie Emerson

How do you chance upon the many techniques that you employ in your art pieces?
Oooh, interesting question, I guess initially that was from my fine art education at Kingston University, back in 2004. We were encouraged to try new media, and so I worked with screen-printing, etching and film there. Even then I was mixing up different media; creating solvent transfer prints on canvas and then embroidering over the top and painting onto screen-prints. I’m still mixing things up now, and am always interested in both creating new techniques and discovering old ones.

Recently I have been screen-printing using natural materials, like ash, sawdust and charcoal powder. I wanted to create prints which were imperfect and softer, and I looked into the technology used in flocking and adapted it. Charcoal is one of the most exciting and volatile of materials to use, I like not knowing how a print is going to turn out. My dad is also a cabinetmaker so he has been saving me different types of saw dust from his workshop.

Rosie Emerson Rhoda edition 1 of 2

Rhoda edition 1 of 2.

What has been your favorite discovery so far, and why is it so fun to play with?
At the moment it is an old process called Cyanotype printing. I only started using it to create work this year, and this work is forming my Solo show ‘Sirens’ which opens next week at Hang Up Gallery in Stoke Newington, London. It’s a brilliantly playful process; I’m combining real size negatives with objects – everything from shells to branches to salt – to create two tone, one off or small editions of prints. The process responds to UV light, so I even made some using the sun.

Rosie Emerson Selene

Selene.

What do you look for in a model for your artwork?
My work to date has involved solitary figures, they are mostly friends or friends of friends, although I have worked with some wonderful professional models such as Daisy Lowe and Amber Le Bon to name drop a few. It is not so important for me if they are known figures or not, It’s about an interesting face – I am always drawn to strong looking women, although recently I have made softer, more introspective pieces. I have just started taking my own pictures rather than working collaboratively with photographers, which means directing models is something I am improving at. I’ve worked with some great photographers namely Becky Palmer and Mark Bayley and I can now say ‘press you lips together’, rather than can you ‘shut your mouth’ for example. It is very important for me that things are unrushed and everyone is enjoying the shoot, that’s when the unexpected and the creative are allowed to happen.

Rosie Emerson Marlene Dietrich #6

Marlene Dietrich #6.

You also dabble in film, what can the viewer expect from this experience?
Yes, alongside my Cyanotypes in the ‘Sirens’ show I am showing a short Super 8 film. It’s not too far removed from the photographic works upstairs, but film is a fantastic and I think provocative medium, which in the case of ‘White Knight’ raises ideas about looking at people looking at art, so the relationship between the audience and model is subtly flipped, and the viewer becomes the subject.

siren #2 by Rosie Emerson, Cyanotype, 74 cm dimensions round

Siren #2, Cyanotype, 74 cm x 74cm.

How did a degree in fine art set you up for the real world?
Hmm, it didn’t really, we had a great lecture from an outside guest, who offered up some pearls of wisdom, namely about your most useful network being your peers sitting next to you. The course was mostly practical and conceptually led. We had a tiny module called professional practice.

Isis by Rosie Emerson, Cyanotype, 112cm x 76 cm

Isis, Cyanotype, 112cm x 76 cm.

You have exhibited in numerous places around the world, what has been the most memorable occasion or event and why?
Yes, one of the first international projects I did was in Tel Aviv and it was really exciting to see pictures of my work up there. Sadly I am stuck in the studio in London for many of the international shows and art fairs that I do, but I am planning a trip to the West coast of America later this year. I’d love to show some work there, and perhaps make some more work whilst I’m there too.

Rosie Emerson Shrine # 1

Shrine #1.

What advice would you give an up and coming artist when it comes to finding your feet in the ‘real world’?
I say, go for it, then if you’re finding it hard, think long and hard about whether this is something you want to do… really want to do, and if you can’t imagine doing anything else, think about it a bit harder. Think about whether you have the self motivation and are happy to live life with a insecure income, whether you are prepared to put yourself out there to potentially fail and then have to pick yourself up again. And then, if you still really want to be an artist, find a way to make it work. Very few artists live solely off their income as an artist, so think about something else you can do alongside making art. Get a studio, be strict with yourself about making work, apply for everything and anything that takes your fancy, and don’t worry about the rejections. Organize things yourself and don’t wait for things to happen. I quote artist Byron Pritchard, when he says ‘the world doesn’t owe you a job’.

Sirens opens soon at the Hang Up Gallery – read my full listing here. See more work by Rosie Emerson here.

Categories ,Amber Le Bon, ,Becky Palmer, ,Byron Pritchard, ,Cyanotype printing, ,daisy lowe, ,exhibition, ,hackney, ,Hang Up Gallery, ,interview, ,Kingston University, ,Mark Bayley, ,Rosie Emerson, ,Sirens, ,Tel Aviv, ,White Knight

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Amelia’s Magazine | Diamond Mine by Jon Hopkins and King Creosote. A review and interview with Jon Hopkins.

Jon Hopkins King Creosote cover
Diamond Mine was released in the UK a few months ago and came out in the US only recently, for sale so I hope that some of my readers will already have heard it for it is without doubt one of the most wonderful pieces of music I have heard in many years. And I don’t say that lightly. The album is a collaboration between Fife based folk singer songwriter King Creosote and Royal College of Music graduate Jon Hopkins, viagra approved who specialises in electronica.

Jon Hopkins and King Creosote by Gareth A Hopkins
Jon Hopkins and King Creosote by Gareth A Hopkins.

King Creosote is the driving force behind the fabulous Fence Records collective and runs HomeGame Festival in Fife, viagra buy a cult destination for many a muso. Jon Hopkins collaborates with the likes of Coldplay and Brian Eno. Together they really have made something exceptionally special, a sprawling re-imagining of King Creosote songs from across the years, bittersweet lyrics offset with a lushly atmospheric backdrop that includes the sounds of real life. I caught up with both Kenny ‘King Creosote’ Anderson and Jon Hopkins to find out how this unique partnership came about, and what the process of making Diamond Mine was like. First up here’s Jon:

When and where did you first hear King Creosote’s music? Did you fall in love immediately or was it a slow gradual thing?
A friend of mine kept putting Kenny And Beth’s Musakal Boat Rides on at parties and stuff. It took me a while to get into, it had such a different sound to the more polished things I was used to. It grew on me quickly but it was when I first heard his much harder-to-find album Psalm Clerk that I became a massive fan.

King Creosote and Jon Hopkins by Felice
King Creosote and Jon Hopkins by Felice Perkins.

This album was produced over a number of years… how has that process worked in reality? How many times have you managed to meet up, and are there any memorable moments from those meetings?
The album probably took about 6 or 7 weeks in total, but hugely spread out. We recorded most of the vocals in one go, then collected sounds from all over the place to build up the backdrops. We’re friends predominantly so we meet a fair few times a year, sometimes we record, sometimes we sit around talking nonsense and consuming fruit beers. 

You talk about the songs tapping into the “sweet sadness” of everyday life, and I think this is the first album in so long that has made me almost want to cry. Why do you think that Kenny’s voice is so evocative? And how have you done your best to encourage those emotions he defines so well?
For me it’s something in the accent, the phrasing, the lyrics, and the fact that there aren’t any singers that sound like him. On this record I wanted to kind of build these sonic worlds for that voice to live in, if you can forgive the pretentiousness of that sentence. The crucial thing was never to add any parts that would detract from the voice.

Jon Hopkins. Photo by Steve Gullick
Jon Hopkins. Photo by Steve Gullick.

Where does your female choir come from?
It is just one voice layered many times, that of Lisa Elle, who harmonises with Kenny throughout the record. I liked the idea of making her sound like a choir of sirens, in keeping with the whole seafaring thing – that is what the end section of John Taylor’s Month Away is supposed to be.

Some of the tracks feature a backdrop of normal daytime noises against which Kenny’s vocals are overlaid. Why did you decide to do this? And where were these recorded?
I liked the idea of dropping the listener into the reality of the world that these songs come from. All the field recordings are from the fishing villages in Fife around the place Kenny has spent his life. It’s a big part of the record, and is a technique I’ve been using on my own stuff for a while too.

Jon Hopkins and King Creosote by Lorna Scobie
Jon Hopkins and King Creosote by Lorna Scobie.

What was the best part of visiting Kenny in Fife?
I’ve been visiting that part of the world regularly for 7 years now; Kenny and his friends organise an incredible music festival there every year, which attracts some amazing artists. Too many amazing memories to list, plus most are unprintable.

Will you and Kenny be working again, and if so what have you got planned?
We have been thinking about a follow-up, yes. No definite ideas or plans yet though. This is not a project we tend to move quickly on.

Listen to a taster of the album here:

Next up, my interview with the equally fabulous King Creosote

Categories ,album, ,brian eno, ,Coldplay, ,Diamond Mine, ,electronica, ,Felice Perkins, ,Fence Records, ,festival, ,Fife, ,folk, ,Gareth A Hopkins, ,HomeGame, ,interview, ,Jon Hopkins, ,Kenny And Beth’s Musakal Boat Rides, ,Kenny Anderson, ,King Creosote, ,Lorna Scobie, ,Psalm Clerk, ,review, ,Royal College of Music, ,scotland, ,Sirens, ,Steve Gullick

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