New River Folk
Research Project
During summer 2021 Laura Copsey and Philip Crewe were illustrators in residence for the first Engine House Residency, commissioned by the Quentin Blake Centre for Illustration (formerly House of Illustration). The outcomes, New River Folk Museum and the New River: Immersions exhibitions were installed at the New River Head site during Open House London and London Design Festival 2022.
Copsey and Crewe collaborated to explore the heritage of the New River, with focus on historic trades and superstitions associated with water in the era of the New Rivers construction (1604–1613). Their intention was to discover the names and occupations of working class trades people, often omitted from the New Rivers official history, people who had once either worked for the New River Company or would have had occupations affected by it.
Their New River Folk became characters, each with a collection of storied objects, tools and ephemera presented as a fictional museum, capable of telling stories of their working lives and beliefs. Being from marginalized historical groups documentation was scarce –fragments, gaps and unknowing. As storytellers, this grey area between what si real and imagined is the territory in which Copsey and Crewe’s work sits, where curiousity and not-knowing becomes a fertile site for creativity.
The collections of the New River Folk, Mary Woolaston, Joan Starkeye and William Mollitrape are all made using traditional craft techniques and site specific process. Material was ‘excavated’ on site and repurposed and images were made directly with the site using camerealess photography, 16mm film and New River water.
As a result, the colections became para-fictional, simultaneously real and unreal. ‘Para-fiction’ is a term that describes artworks that inhabit the overlap between fact and fiction. ‘In para-fiction, real and/or imaginary personages and stories intersect with the world as it is being lived’ in the present with works often skilled at mimicry and therefore potentially deceptive, which in a museum context creates an obvious ethical tension. However, Copsey and Crewe aimed to offset the potential harms of para-fiction, via playful spirit and use of ‘immersive heritage’ methods with “story-led, audience and participation centred, multisensory experience, attuned to its environment,” Here the heritage is not about the past at all, but constructed ideas of how the past may serve present and speak to our contemporary interests and concerns.
More info about this project:
qbcentre.org.uk/journal/copsey-and-crewe-narrative-extraction-services
Instagram: @copseyandcrewe and @new.river.artist
About us
Philip and Laura met as students at the RCA in 2016 and share an interest in heritage, people and objects. Their work explores how time, experience, traditional craft and objects can communicate; and how careful material decisions to enhance context and sense of place. They have collaborated with @ReachOutRCA on ‘Institutional Failure’ related to the authority and (un)reliability of historical narratives; and at The Museum of English Rural Life (MERL) where Philip created a layered tool kit for farming and baking, inspired by London folklore, to facilitate Laura’s portable wheatfield where she attempted to grow one loaf of bread from scratch
Laura Copsey is an experimental illustrator from East Anglia. Her way of working is interdisciplinary and collaborative, blurring with her background as a therapist and musician. Laura is interested in the grey area between what is real and imagined, between truth and lies – gaps which often shed light on what a particular story can reveal about the present. Laura uses objects, cameraless photography, moving image, collage and sound to explore traces of human endeavour from history, within heritage locations, traditional trades or museum collections. She also organises expeditions, most recently with Sail Britain on the theme of Islandness. Laura teaches level 4 on BA illustration Animation at Kingston School of Art.
Instagram: @laurachops
Website: www.lauracopseyart.com
Philip Crewe is a designer/maker/tutor from the Isle of Wight. Through his practice ‘Espergaerde’ he explores the fascinating wiggly weirdness that exists between people and things. He makes storied objects – objects that are valued for how they are made and relevant in how they are used. Philip works at Goldmiths University. He has recently completed a residency at the Museum of Cornish Life in Helston.
Instagram: @espergaerde
Website: espergaerde.com