Page 2 of 2 :

This project blog »

Bookmarks

Feedback Feedback

Inappropriate material?
Ideas? Technical issues?
» Feedback to a-n

Project blogs

John Jones. Projection Space and the future

By: Rosalind Davis

In the summer I am going to be showing in the Projection Space at John Jones ‘ Which has a long history of supporting emerging artists and contemporary art. .. '

I see this as a fantastic opportunity to start a blog and take you on the journey with me as I agonise over new work and mull over my experiences in the art world.

 

click to expand/collapse 

Rosalind Davis , '26 Remain', Oil and Embroidery on poly-silk . 65x65cmThere are 26 remaining families in the Kidbroke/Ferriers Estate. As I walked around the estate it looked completely uninhabited, a real ghost town, with a charged silence.  then, occassionally  I would come across a house or flat that was lived in. the Residents that are left are home owners, who used their right to buy options many years ago. Now they are pretty much stuck there as the market value of these flats and houses are not enough for them to be able to buy another home. Anecdotal evidence from residents says gangs patrol there, there are ants and rats. Some of them remember the happier times, of communities and parties. To be stuck there is unimaginable and tragic.

[enlarge]
Rosalind Davis , '26 Remain', Oil and Embroidery on poly-silk . 65x65cmThere are 26 remaining families in the Kidbroke/Ferriers Estate. As I walked around the estate it looked completely uninhabited, a real ghost town, with a charged silence.  then, occassionally  I would come across a house or flat that was lived in. the Residents that are left are home owners, who used their right to buy options many years ago. Now they are pretty much stuck there as the market value of these flats and houses are not enough for them to be able to buy another home. Anecdotal evidence from residents says gangs patrol there, there are ants and rats. Some of them remember the happier times, of communities and parties. To be stuck there is unimaginable and tragic.

Rosalind Davis , '109 Hectares', Oil and Embroidery on poly-silk . 65x65cm Final Version of 109 Hectares, which refers to the surface area of the land on which the Kidbrooke / Ferriers estate was built. Only a handful of people still live here. Unable or unwilling to leave. A hectare is the size of a football field.

[enlarge]
Rosalind Davis , '109 Hectares', Oil and Embroidery on poly-silk . 65x65cm Final Version of 109 Hectares, which refers to the surface area of the land on which the Kidbrooke / Ferriers estate was built. Only a handful of people still live here. Unable or unwilling to leave. A hectare is the size of a football field.

Rosalind Davis , 'Well Hall Road', Oil and Embroidery on cotton . The final finished version of Well Hall road

[enlarge]
Rosalind Davis , 'Well Hall Road', Oil and Embroidery on cotton . The final finished version of Well Hall road

Rosalind Davis , '8, 000 Souls. Part II', Oil and Embroidery on cotton . 60x40cm Final version

[enlarge]
Rosalind Davis , '8, 000 Souls. Part II', Oil and Embroidery on cotton . 60x40cm Final version

# 11 [29 June 2009]

 

The delivery van from John Jones is coming tomorrow and I am putting the last few details into the paintings.
I feel I have learnt a lot in these 2 months about my painting. I have found a new confidence, a freedom....the paintings have gotten less earnest. Less concerned with realistic representation and I am enjoying it all immensely. I am still unsure of my big well hall road piece and it may not be right still, but those decisions can come next week during installation and discussion of the pieces I shall show.

I have been using square scarves in these new pieces which allow for a new composition to occur within the works and to consider the composition in different ways and I shall continue to work on these scarves in the future. The interference between the floral patterns is interesting.
The florals produce a dichotomy with the rural and idyllic versus the tensions of the urban cityscape.

Physically and mentally I am exhausted. I have felt under the weather on and off for the last month really. My head and eyes ache and my throat is sore. I think I will be in bed on Wednesday recuperating.... Painting is a very physical effort and you are also pouring yourself into it mentally. Challenging your opinions on it, reviewing the pieces, considering when to stop the paint and where to start again.

Emotionally though I allow myself to feel a bit proud of the progress I have made and where I have been less successful in them there are lessons to be learnt.
I am excited and eager to get onto the next one. To discover more. To keep going.Wish me luck

View comment icon View 1 comment »

Comments on this post

The Well Hall Rd. painting? If it was mine I would make the constrast between the floor and sky less. The floor is smooth and the sky really busy with the cinema trying to fight its place. I would level things up. Like you have done it in your other ones. But then its not my painting is it? Or you would have my connection with the building which is Kali or whatever that goddes was in Sanbad the Sailor, she is the goddess of destruction and she might destroy the painting if you included her?

posted on 2009-06-29 by Rob Turner

Rosalind Davis , '26 Remain '.

[enlarge]
Rosalind Davis , '26 Remain '.

Rosalind Davis, '26 Remain , Drawing', Pencil and Pen on paper .

[enlarge]
Rosalind Davis, '26 Remain , Drawing', Pencil and Pen on paper .

# 12 [7 July 2009]

I am delighted to invite you to:

Projection Rosalind Davis

 

Exhibition from 6th July - 21st August

Open to the public Monday – Friday from 9am – 6pm

 

We are delighted to announce Rosalind Davis as our next artist to exhibit in Projection, a space for solo shows which aims to increase the exposure of mainly unseen artists as an aspect of their professional development.

 

Rosalind Davis is a mixed media painter and graduate from the RCA, creating melancholy dystopian landscapes that explore human experience and identity.

 

Davis fuses painting, collage and embroidery onto printed floral fabrics, selected for their historical, cultural and symbolic representations. This complex relation between mediums is integral to the piece emphasising the fragility of the spaces depicted and the disconcerting juxtaposition between aesthetics and meaning.

 

www.johnjones.co.uk

4 Morris Place, N4 3JG

020 7281 5439

 

Rosalind Davis, 'The Watchtower ', Embroidery on Damask . A watchtower in India, a colonial outpost. I was interested in juxtaposing something very manmade and aggressive with the softness of embroidery , subverting both medium and subject.

[enlarge]
Rosalind Davis, 'The Watchtower ', Embroidery on Damask . A watchtower in India, a colonial outpost. I was interested in juxtaposing something very manmade and aggressive with the softness of embroidery , subverting both medium and subject.

Rosalind Davis, '8,000 Souls Prep drawing', Pencil and Pen on paper . these prepatory drawings are part of my process of working out my paintings. Usually they were a lot looser than the end resulting painting. It was the qualities of the drawings that the artist Matthew Atkinson pointed out as being of interest, there was an intimacy and freedom, which I ( hopefully) carried into my last few works. Peer networks are very important!

[enlarge]
Rosalind Davis, '8,000 Souls Prep drawing', Pencil and Pen on paper . these prepatory drawings are part of my process of working out my paintings. Usually they were a lot looser than the end resulting painting. It was the qualities of the drawings that the artist Matthew Atkinson pointed out as being of interest, there was an intimacy and freedom, which I ( hopefully) carried into my last few works. Peer networks are very important!

Photograph. Robin Hood Estate, Poplar. I am not sure if that is meant to be an ironic name

[enlarge]
Photograph. Robin Hood Estate, Poplar. I am not sure if that is meant to be an ironic name

# 13 [13 July 2009]

I have not left yet! No no, here a little longer......I have been working away at one last painting in the last week before the show opens. There were also a book of drawings to organise and now.....The paintings have been hung  and there is the undeniable fear and exhiliration of the Exhibition!

 you may be pleased to hear, I am restored to good health, have broken only a few more glasses and am considering tackling my tax return (joy)

I am also seeking new inspiration and have been cycling around poplar and silvertown, very bleak in places. I saw 5 burnt out pubs in a mile! I am also off to Gravesend and Margate over the next week. Exciting! I used to spend weekends at Dreamland in Margate with my dad and I am interested to see how it has changed, soak up the atmosphere. Seaside towns are intriguing, a mix of kitsch and seediness.

Also with the big art party at John Jones to gear up to on the 31st July I am doing all that I can to promote the show and am constantly thrilled by the great help of John Jones crew in all of this and  the marvellous marketing ladies ! Self promotion can be a terrible bane but  a necessary evil. In some ways it can be quite a joy if people respond to you,an exhibition is a great reason to get in touch with peole and tell them what you are working on. At  other times it feels like you must as well be chucking a piece of paper out of the window for all the good it is doing you....! I shall let you know how it all goes.....

# 14 [30 July 2009]

The Summer Art Party is tomorrow! Eek!

The feedback from John Jones has been fantastic already with clients really engaging with the works. Tomorrow there will be about 600 people heading through the doors. I feel faint.

I actually really like talking about the works, the discussions are fascinating. Also if you go to the RCA you soon stop feeling self conscious about it as you are always explaining and exploring your works to rooms full of people. It doesn’t stop the nerves though and tomorrow will be super –charged. My biggest fear is being mediocre. I don’t mind if people don’t like it….well I do if I am really honest but that is not realistic. 

 

In the interim I have been distracting myself with those research trips I mentioned. Assembling ideas and planning out pieces. I am going  paint 3 pieces inspired by Margate. A memento-mori of a town. One of the pieces is going to be interspliced with social housing from Poplar as problem families used to be shipped out of London to Margate.

I remember  Margate was so vibrant when we went there as children, now row upon row of boarded up shops are like skeletons on the marine parade. The Turner contemporary exhibition in a former M&S was fantastic though. A really great show and indicative of the revival which may have a chance to occur there. 

 

I have also been to Brighton to discuss my next exhibition, ‘Floorplan’ at the Brighton Phoenix Gallery in September, a very good public gallery. I am organising a workshop with a local community group, plus I and the other artists shall be involved in an artists talk discussing the psychology of buildings which I am already looking forward to.

 

I have also been planning and interviewed for drawing workshops at the Tower of London and found out today I got the job!

 

As for painting, I am now back to the actuality of it. I am as always slightly daunted by what has I have made before.  Back into the cycle of questioning, exploring, doubting and persevering.

 

Tomorrow if you are coming to the Summer Art Party you will be able to find me, see johnjones.co.uk for more details.  I shall be the lady doused in Lavender oil and hopefully not breathing into a bag.  Come say hello

View comment icon View 1 comment »

Comments on this post

your work is beautiful, I'm sure people coming will love it! (I live in Exeter so a bit far to pop in)

posted on 2009-07-30 by Catherine Cartwright

# 15 [7 August 2009]

It turned out to be quite an  amazing evening. A whirlwind of chatter! I think I spoke about my work for about 5 hours straight. In fact I got a rather lovely review, my very first one from Spoonfed. I am so excited I can barely sleep!

Assemblage at John Jones Project Space by: Claire_loves_jam

Assemblage is a 'festival of contemporary makers' pursuing the workshop's commitment to thrusting emerging artists and unseen, contemporary art into the public arena. The project space lurks down a quiet lane near Finsbury Park tube station and strategically draped lanterns create an intimate, ambient atmosphere. It's refreshingly unpretentious.

The star of the night has to be Rosalind Davis. Her exhibition of mixed media paintings in the Projection space reflects a fascination with grotty and disused looking buildings which have an underlying importance to the communities they serve. The pieces fuse painting with collage and embroidery and invite closer inspection to see where cotton ends and acrylic begins.

The idea here is that the tessellated canvas explores equally complex themes enshrined within the structures they are based upon. Often the buildings painted are taken from areas of serious social deprivation and are supposed to represent the lifeblood of their surrounding communities.

From a distance broad, bold brush strokes used to depict neglected buildings contrast with delicate, floral print backgrounds but a closer look reveals meticulous detail. Each individual stitch masquerades as a streak of paint which at times can look a little chaotic – something I'm told is meant to emphasise the fragility of the structures captured on canvas. It's a bit like art nouveau; the deeper you delve into the image the more attention to detail you find. My eyes are sore.

Despite their vivid and bright tones, I still find the paintings very foreboding. Whether or not they're successful in portraying 'melancholy dystopian landscapes that explore human experience and identity' I would certainly recommend checking out Ms Davis' work.

http://www.spoonfed.co.uk/spooners/claire_loves_jam-2366/assemblage-at-john-jones-project-space-1306/

Rosalind Davis , 'The Flamingo ', Oil and embroidery on cotton , 2009. The Flamingo/ Kent Hotel in Margate. A third of the shops in Margate have closed keaving a memento mori of a town. Hopefully to be regenerated.

[enlarge]
Rosalind Davis , 'The Flamingo ', Oil and embroidery on cotton , 2009. The Flamingo/ Kent Hotel in Margate. A third of the shops in Margate have closed keaving a memento mori of a town. Hopefully to be regenerated.

# 16 [26 August 2009]

The exhibition at John Jones has now finished and with it comes a trace of sadness but also many positive things to conclude this blog with. It has been fantastic in terms of feedback, I have had my first reviews, one from our very own editor Andrew Bryant which is rather amazing!  

click the below link to read it.

http://www.a-n.co.uk/interface/reviews/single/556131

as well as on Spoonfed.co.uk

http://bit.ly/Projectionreview

 

Projection really did project me out there and project my work.

It made me start a blog through which I have met and had dialogue with a number of interesting people. For John Jones, the exhibition with all the blog feeding in created a buzz of excitement for them and there were a lot of positive comments from staff and visitors alike. Their enthusiasm and professionalism did not wane and I have grown very attached to them all.

 I have since been preparing for the next group show I am in at PHOENIX BRIGHTON,  with Louise Bristow , Peter Bobby, Rowena Easton, Mark Hewitt, Jane Ward, Rich Whitewhich opens next Friday for a preview, 4th September until 11th October .

 Floor Plan explores buildings, architecture, and the physical, aesthetic, and psychological interactions between these structures, their inhabitants, and the surrounding communities. www.phoenixbrighton.org

 We are going to be having a panel discussion on the 23rd September with Zoe Whitley, Curator of Contemporary Programmes at the V&A,   around the central themes in the ‘Floor Plan’ exhibition, and in particular, the interrelationship between psychology and architecture which inspires further thoughts on the themes I am concerned with in my work.

There are several more exhibitions to go this year and each one teaches me something new and makes new connections. It is a joy  ( sometimes laced with anxiety!)

And so now fellow travellers I leave you with two things, this interview I did for Oh Goodness Greatness, which is something on a  more  personal note

http://ohgoodnessgreatness.blogspot.com/2009/08/62-painting-light-rosalind-davis.html

 and with words from Graham Crowley.

 ‘ Being an artist is a complex and demanding business...’

Ain’t that the truth

View comment icon View 1 comment »

Comments on this post

Thank you so much for your kind words about my review Rosalind, however someone has notified me that the link doesn't seem to be working.

posted on 2009-08-27 by Andrew Bryant

Page 2 of 2 :

This project blog »

Rosalind Davis

I am a mixed media painter creating complex,  3d dystopian landscapes that explore human and social experience and identity.

I explore themes of transience, survival, community and isolation 

The medium I utilise, fusing painting with collage and embroidery, is complex.

Embroidery and collage is used as a mode of paint emphasise the fragility of the spaces depicted and the disconcerting juxtaposition between aesthetics and meaning.

 I graduated from the RCA in 2005

www.rosalinddavis.co.uk