Emily Peasgood | |
---|---|
Born | Emily Anne Peasgood 8 April 1981 Grimsby, Lincolnshire, England |
Occupation(s) | Composer, sound artist, artist, author |
Years active | 2010s–present |
Awards | Ivors Composer Award for Sonic Art (2018) |
Website | emilypeasgood |
Emily Anne Peasgood (born 1981 in Grimsby, Lincolnshire) is an Ivors Composer Awards winning English composer and sound artist. [1]
Peasgood creates research-led and site specific interactive artworks for galleries and outdoor public spaces, ranging from large-scale community events to intimate sound installations. [2] [3] Peasgood is best known for her work in outdoor public locations with specific communities of people, often using innovative technology and design that visitors can interact with. [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] Her work has been described as magical, [13] evocative [14] and memorable. [15]
Peasgood was profiled by the i as the Hip Op Composer. [16] In 2017 Peasgood delivered the TEDx Folkestone talk "Emily! Don't do that!". [17]
Peasgood was awarded a PhD by Canterbury Christ Church University for her thesis Leading with Aesthetic: Creating Accessible, Inclusive and Engaging Musical Artworks Through Experimental Processes in the Community. Peasgood is a composition tutor at Canterbury Christ Church University. [18] Peasgood is a co-author of The Work of the Military Wives Choirs [19] and The perceived effects of singing on the health and well-being of wives and partners of members of the British Armed Forces: a cross-sectional survey. [20]
In 2023 British Library commissioned Peasgood to create a listening desk as legacy for Unlocking Our Sound Heritage. [21]
In 2014, Peasgood created Landscapes [22] [23] [24] a choral work responding to the landscape artworks of J. M. W. Turner and Helen Frankenthaler. It premiered at the exhibition Making Painting: J.M.W. Turner and Helen Frankenthaler at Turner Contemporary.
In 2016 Peasgood premiered Lifted [25] [26] [27] at Turner Contemporary. In the same year she premiered BIRDS, a sung and spoken word piece observing feminine ritual and behaviour through the lens of a documentary film narrator [28] and Crossing Over, [29] a piece commissioned by Turner Contemporary to premier as part of its event commemorating the Zong massacre as depicted on J. M. W. Turner's painting The Slave Ship (1840).
Peasgood's Halfway to Heaven [30] [31] [32] [33] [34] won the prize for Sonic Art at the 2018 British Composer Awards [35] [36] [37] (renamed the Ivors Composer Awards). In the same year, the "eerily evocative" [38] Requiem for Cross Bones [39] [40] featured at MERGE Bankside [41] [42] and Peasgood created The Illusion of Conscious Thought for the East Hill Cliff Railway and West Hill Cliff Railway in Hastings as part of the Coastal Currents Arts Festival. [43]
In 2019 Never Again [44] was nominated for an Ivors Composer Award in the category of Community or Educational Project. [45] [46] In 2017 Peasgood was nominated in the same category for BIRDS and other Stories and Crossing Over. [47]
Kent is a county in the South East England region, the closest county to continental Europe. It borders Essex across the entire estuary of the River Thames to the north; the French department of Pas-de-Calais across the Strait of Dover to the south-east; East Sussex to the south-west; Surrey to the west and Greater London to the north-west. The county town is Maidstone.
Folkestone is a port town on the English Channel, in Kent, south-east England. The town lies on the southern edge of the North Downs at a valley between two cliffs. It was an important harbour, shipping port and fashionable coastal resort for most part of the 19th and mid 20th centuries.
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Jyll Bradley is an artist based in London. She makes installations, films, drawings and sculptures. She has produced public realm projects such as 'Green/Light ' (2014) commissioned by the Folkestone Triennial, and 'Dutch Light' (2017) commissioned by Turner Contemporary (Margate).
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