Erin London
Erin London is a multidisciplinary artist from the United States whose work explores memory, identity, and cultural inheritance through photography, textiles, and installation. Raised in the Southeastern United States and shaped by family lore, her practice draws on personal and regional histories to examine themes of migration, matrilineal ritual, and the emotional architecture of home. Working often through environmental self-portraiture and site-specific storytelling, her work reflects the layered histories, beauty, and contradictions of the American South. She lives and works in Alabama.
Erin’s practice is rooted in storytelling, where discarded objects, personal symbolism, and fragmented narratives are brought together through a patchwork approach. Her work engages ideas around womanhood, domestication, tradition, and consumerism, often informed by familial and generational narratives.
At Bored Peach Club, she is exploring the concept of “being lost” as a creative state. Rather than seeking resolution, her residency focuses on wandering as a form of research, using photography, writing, and self-portraiture to document emotional and physical disorientation. This process extends into listening and collaboration, incorporating local stories, oral histories, and community participation.
Her residency will culminate in a multi-sensory installation and exhibition that brings together sound, light, image, and narrative. Alongside this, she will host The Lost Workshop, an interactive session inviting participants to reflect on their own experiences of disorientation through writing and image-making.
Contact
info(@)boredpeachclub.com