Abby Rogers

(She/They)

I am an interdisciplinary artist born and based in Glasgow. I am devoted to a practice that combines illustration, installation, and film. My work is rooted in storytelling and anthropomorphism and is fueled by my passion for global issues, including human and environmental rights, shaping the themes and messages I explore through my art. Using imaginative characters, landscapes and narratives, I depict reality as I feel it, not as it truly appears, distorting and creating new worlds that reflect my innermost thoughts and emotions.

I use materials not only as a means of making but also as a force to push the message my work carries. My ability to tap into different medium’s allows me to communicate across multiple platforms to audiences and through various environments and means. My process is intuitive and impassioned, embracing ambiguity and a surrealist approach, inviting viewers to explore a new world of imagination and visual metaphors.

My work exists outside traditional gallery spaces, transporting the audience outside of the white box and into the worlds I create.

Still from film featuring the main character and faceless figure. The image is primarily black and white, besides the yellow glow the figure is taking from the main character.

A STAR FELL

A Star Fell is a short film, inviting you to descend into a mythical world where the visual aesthetics mirror the darkness and textures in the shifting landscape of the world around us today. Our identities often fall apart as we get older. As the environments around us bleed into our lives and breed anxieties, contempt and cruelty, individuals lose themselves to the monotony and traumas they are surrounded by.

In this work, I tell the story of a child, innocent and naïve, who fell into a new world. Guided by a protective faceless figure, the child must overcome the trials of this world and escape those who try to take their ‘star’, a gift they were given as they fell. Through detailed imagery and animations, the film follows the child whilst exploring themes of pessimism and corruption, asking you to reflect on the ways in which we become embodiments of our environment; for better or for worse.

This film is a stop-motion animation, constructed entirely by hand. The filming process was completed on a make-shift multiplane camera, using panes of glass and paper cups, recreating the techniques of large animation studios. The visuals throughout the film were created using only paper, pencil, pen, watercolour, charcoal and oil pastel. Within the film there is a total of 1,593 hand-drawn illustrations. I was drawn to tell this story with paper; its use enhances the storytelling, paper is malleable and fragile, as is our protagonist. The achromatic nature of the film reduces the world into a deprived and dangerous place, allowing the few moments of colour to breathe joy and hope into it.

The score and musical motifs are original works by composer Col Laughland (music.cl@pm.me). The foley sound was created in collaboration with pupils of Castleton Primary School.

Black and white film still featuring close up of a fox/cat looking face on.
Film still featuring the main character falling down between layers of buildings.
Image of projection in space. Walls of space are painted with a grey ‘lime wash’ effect and wall being projected onto is white. Space is furnished with various mis-match blankets, cushions and bean bags. The projection shows a splash of water.
Black and white film still featuring the main character laying on the beach being washed up by the waves.
Black and white film still featuring four anthropomorphic mushrooms walking along the frame.
Predominantly black and white film still featuring the main character holding onto a bubble which contains a glowing star. Only the bubble/star and characters eyes have colour (Bubble is multicolour and eyes/star are yellow).
Black and white film still of a group of mushrooms becoming anthropomorphic and separating from their tree.
Projection of the credits to the film. The main character is laying in grass and the words ‘ABBY ROGERS’ are in bold white text.
Predominantly black and white films till featuring the main characters walking along a grassy hill while the moon above grins and stares at them. The only colour is the main characters eyes which are yellow.
Predominantly black and white film still featuring the main character falling from an above view as a star glows above them. The star and main characters eyes are the only this with colour (yellow).
Projection is space. Walls of space are painted with a grey ‘lime wash’ effect and wall being projected onto is white. Space is furnished with various mis-match blankets, cushions and bean bags. The projection shows the main characters embracing each other in the forest.
Predominantly black and white film still featuring the main characters hand reaching for a floating bubble which contains a star. The bubble/star and the glow it creates on the hand are the only thing in colour (Bubble is multicolour and star/glow is yellow).
Black and white film still featuring a close up of a smiling giant who is surrounded by and made up of grass, trees, and bushes.