Artists & documentarian Ben Edge talks about his new book _Folklore Rising: An Artist's Journey through the British Ritual Year_(Watkins Publishing). Ben Edge is a rising star of both the art world and the current folk renaissance. This first trade book of Edge's art, featuring over 200 artworks, is a unique insight into his creative process as well as the first mainstream book to explore the popular folk customs of the British ritual year.Ben was born in Croydon in 1985 and currently lives and works in North London. For the majority of his childhood he lived in a small town called Southborough in Kent. As a teenager Edge became interested in punk rock, folk music and art. These interests led him to take up painting and to study Fine Art at West Kent College and later at London Metropolitan University. It was also in his teenage years that he began writing and performing music. He has since been in numerous bands and toured Europe extensively.Edge is predominately a figurative artist interested in folklore and story telling, whose paintings and film work depict the extraordinary lives of ordinary people. He believes his interests originate from his childhood, where he grew up around colourful and eccentric family members who would tell him remarkable stories. In 2009 his painting ‘The Animal Handler’ was selected for exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery as part of the BP Portrait Award. Edge's grandfather, who was the subject of the painting, was a porter at Smithfield meat market as well as an animal handler in his spare time. Edge cites his grandfather, as well as his family in general, as a major influence on his work. Not only are they inspiring characters, but creative people who have a wide array of interests, such as painting, drawing and wood-carving.Edge is a self-proclaimed perfectionist and his perfectionism and personality is mirrored within his clean and precise style of painting and his fascination for the detail and craft that is often found in Folk and Naive Art as well as the traditions of religious and northern Renaissance painting. These combined influences inspired the title of his debut solo show ‘Folk Renaissance’ that took place at the HIX Art gallery, London, in March 2017.Since then, inspired by a serendipitous experience in which Ben stumbled across a Druid ceremony taking place on Tower Hill in central London, he has been researching the folklore and seasonal customs of the British Isles and was amazed to discover that there were such events taking place all over the UK. Although he was not entirely conscience of it at the time, a new obsession had been born and he began travelling up and down the British Isles, extensively gathering source material and responding to his research through a new series of twenty paintings and a full length documentary film. This body of work titled 'Frontline Folklore' was exhibited alongside a carefully curated selection of objects from the influential set designer, Simon Costin's remarkable 'Museum of British Folklore' collection at the Crypt gallery of the St Pancras new church throughout June 2021, in an exhibition titled 'Ritual Britain' that attracted over 10,000 visitors with extensive media coverage and viral exposure across social media.Ben is currently working on his latest series of works ‘Children of Albion’ that is due for exhibition in 2025.https://www.benedge.co.uk/The Frontline Folklore documentary film: (https://vimeo.com/897444792)If you would like to purchase a copy of _Folklore Rising_, you can find it on our webshop: (https://shop.watkinsbooks.com/product...#Festivals#Ceremonies
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