Image: Megan Rooney's studio
Megan Rooney in front of Echoes & Hours (2024) in situ mural at Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge. Photo: Camilla Greenwell
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Megan Rooney's studio 8 Artists Tells Us About Their Most Interesting Studio Spaces

25 December 2024

Verity Babbs

Studio spaces come in all shapes and sizes, from the home studios in the corner of an artist’s one-bedroom apartment to the palatial. Some choose to kit them out like a place of work, some as an extension of their homes, and others like a place of worship.

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This year, we’ve chatted to some of contemporary art’s most exciting rising stars, asking them about their studio spaces, from their most memorable (not necessarily in a good way) to their ultimate favorites.

Megan Rooney: Best of Both Worlds Across London

[At the King’s Cross studio] the light is incredible, as it pours in from all sides and this has hugely impacted the way I work as my paintings have their own unique ecosystems and sort of act as weathervanes or barometers.

I always paint from a position of motion, so I like to run to Vauxhall where my other studio is. I collect images and weather temperatures (wind, rain, sun, heat) so in a way I’m already painting before I arrive. As these images and impressions lodge in my memory bank and spill out when I’m faced with a blank surface.

Just a short five-minute walk away [from the Vauxhall studio], you get a good bit of London where the original fruit and vegetable or flower market is. The place is buzzing with activity and color. I wander around and look at enormous containers brimming with bright orange carrots; the next one is full of pale green cabbages or electric lemons and so on. In a way, it’s like walking through a colossal painting. So I go there almost every day, drink a coffee with the food packers, and steal some images for my memory bank.

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