Lizzy Rose (1988-2022) was an artist and disability activist who lived and worked in Margate in Kent, England.
Lizzy Rose | |
---|---|
Born | 1988 |
Died | 2022 |
Website | lizzyrose.co.uk |
Rose's work explored community, British identity and hidden culture, chronic illness communities online and the culture surrounding them, narrative storytelling, and humour. Her practice included video, photography, ceramics, drawing, writing and curation.[1]
Background
editRose lived in Kent for most of her life and was based in Margate.[2]
Born in Australia, Rose grew up in Kent.[2] She went to Simon Langton Girls’ Grammar School in Canterbury, before studying Fine Art at Central Saint Martins, London. She graduated with a first class degree in 2010.[2]
After university Rose worked as a gallery assistant at the Turner Contemporary in Margate, Kent.[3] From 2012 to 2015 she worked with Limbo arts in Margate as assistant curator.[4] In 2016 she toured Japan to study trends in Japanese art, and became part of the programming team at the Crate gallery, Margate. The same year she became an associate at Open School East art school in London.[5]
Crohn's and impact on artwork
editRose had Crohn's disease. Her work addressed chronic illness, and how society deals with it.[3][1]
Rose spent an increasing amount of time in hospital from 2010 onwards.[4] She turned her hospital bed into a studio, documenting and reflecting on the daily reality of this environment. During this time, she began to use social media to make her work.[4]
Notable artwork
editJourney to film a ruin (2009)
editRose's mystical Journey to Film a Ruin links Rose's key interests: chronic illness, communities as bodies and overlooked spaces.[6]
The film, shot on a Super 8,[6] explores the vanished communities of the wetlands of Kent and Sussex. It was shown at Somerset House in London in February 2023.[7]
Hospital watercolour club (2014)
editRose's series ‘Hospital Watercolour Club’ (2014), features observational still life works of hospital wares, depicting a bottle of hand sanitizer, a fire alarm and a mobility grab handle.[8] The watercolour and pencil series ‘You meming about your illness is making me uncomfortable’ (2014) recreated internet memes using humour to process frustrations with societal responses to sickness.[8]
Sick blue sea (2018)
editThe video work Sick, blue sea, shown in the final show Gut Feelings in December 2018, was the culmination of several ideas Rose explored throughout her year as an Associate at Open School East.[9] Rose began researching critical thinking around the politics of the body, the relationship between the body and technology and to what extend the body affects politics around identity.[8]
The work follows a fictional narrative spoken by a teenage sperm whale blogging about her chronic nausea.[9]
Arrangement (2018)
editRose's solo show Arrangement examined the culture around flower arranging, nature and knowledge-sharing between cultures.[10] Her installation The Meaning of the Wild, presented a video filmed in The Ohara School of Ikebana in Japan, in a moss-filled room at Crate.[10]
Intravenous Living Salad (2018)
editIntravenous Living Salad (2018) contained her total parenteral nutrition (TPN) bag, which hangs above a pile of salad leaves. Rose used the TPN to grow and sustain the leaves.[8]
My heart will go on (2018)
editRose screened her video piece ‘My Heart Will Go On’ at the ICA in 2018 as part of the event ‘On Cripping’.[11] The work is a comical take[8] on a critical stay in hospital, and shows Lizzy's heart monitor beeping, layered with a soundtrack of her playing the titular Titanic number on a keyboard.[8]
High court challenge
editA judicial review action was brought by Rose against Thanet CCG in 2014.[12] Rose's doctors recommended bone marrow transplantation and chemotherapy and Rose sought NHS funding for oocyte cryopreservation before beginning treatment. Clinicians at King's College Hospital Foundation Trust applied for funding for Rose's treatment but Thanet CCG denied the treatment in May 2013 on the grounds that there was not enough evidence to demonstrate its effectiveness.[12]
Rose sought judicial review on:
- the decision constituted direct discrimination (on the basis that funding for semen cryopreservation was provided to men in similar circumstances).
- it was a breach of the defendant's public sector equality duty under section 149 of the Equality Act 2010, and
- it breached her rights under articles 8 and 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights (and therefore section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998).
These arguments were unsuccessful,[12] however, the judge, Mr Justice Jay, said the CCG "failed properly to address" recommendations made by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and its current funding policy was unlawful.[13]
On their website, NICE issued a press notice saying "Clinical Commissioning Groups (CCGs) cannot choose not to follow NICE guidance because they merely disagree with it, even where there is no statutory duty to do so, a court has ruled."[14]
Dangerous women
editRose's essay "Exposing Trauma: the post-surgery selfie" was included in the book, Dangerous Women: fifty reflections on power, women and identity by Jo Shaw, Ben Fletcher-Watson and Abrisham Ahmadzadeh.[15]
Exhibitions
editThings I have learned the hard way - retrospective (2023)
editA retrospective month-long exhibition of Rose's work (31 March - 23 April 2023) was held across multiple venues in Margate - at Crate, Limbo, Well Projects and Turner Contemporary - alongside a live event at the ICA in London, live streamed by Wysing Broadcasts.[1][16]
An online outreach programme invited hospitalised and housebound artists to share their work and stories.[17]
The time of our lives (2024)
editRose's work was featured as part of the Drawing Room exhibition, 'The Time Of Our Lives'. The Time of Our Lives focuses on the pioneering drawing practices of women artists and their impact on feminist activism from the 1980s until today.[18] It runs until 21 April 2024.
References
edit- ^ a b c "Lizzy Rose (1988-2022): Things I Have Learned The Hard Way". Turner Contemporary. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
- ^ a b c Bailes, Kathy (2022-01-22). "Sad loss of Margate artist and disability activist Lizzy Rose". The Isle Of Thanet News. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
- ^ a b Bailes, Kathy (2022-02-11). "Funeral and Turner Contemporary service to mark life of Margate artist and disability activist Lizzy Rose". The Isle Of Thanet News. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
- ^ a b c "Lizzy Rose". Disability Arts International. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
- ^ It runs until 21 April 2024. "Rose, Lizzy". Disability Arts Online. Retrieved 2023-03-19.
- ^ a b "Somerset House Studios 2023 Programming". Somerset House. 2023-02-07. Retrieved 2023-03-19.
- ^ "Film Screenings: Moving Towards Disability Inclusivity". Somerset House. 2023-01-24. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
- ^ a b c d e f Prowse, Jamila (2023-04-21). "The Legacy of Artist and Activist Lizzy Rose". Frieze. Retrieved 2023-08-05.
- ^ a b "Lizzy Rose". CPP Hounslow. 2021-03-10. Retrieved 2023-08-05.
- ^ a b "Lizzy Rose's indoor moss garden inspired by Japanese floristry". Creative Boom. 2018-09-26. Retrieved 2023-08-05.
- ^ "My heart will go on by Lizzy Rose". 6x6 project. Retrieved 2023-08-05.
- ^ a b c Laird, Gowling WLG-Kieran (2014-04-17). "When nice guidance is more than just guidance – the duty on CCGs following R (Elizabeth Rose) v thanet Clinical Commissioning Group". Lexology. Retrieved 2023-03-04.
- ^ "Crohn's patient Lizzy Rose accepts clinic's egg-freezing offer". BBC News. 2014-04-17. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
- ^ "Court warns CCG over disagreeing with NICE guidance | News | News". NICE. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
- ^ Dangerous women : fifty reflections on women, power and identity. Jo Shaw, Ben Fletcher-Watson, Abrisham Ahmadzadeh. London. 2022. ISBN 978-1-80018-064-2. OCLC 1273669426.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ "Things I Have Learned The Hard Way". Things I Have Learned The Hard Way. Retrieved 2023-08-05.
- ^ Bailes, Kathy (2023-03-25). "Open call for artwork about chronic illness or disability for Sick Artists Club exhibition". The Isle Of Thanet News. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
- ^ "The Time of Our Lives - Exhibition at Drawing Room in London". ArtRabbit. Retrieved 2024-01-29.