Inside the Practice of a Denver Artist Rooted in Nature

Artist Eileen Roscina embraces risk, hand-processed film, and the beauty of creative accidents.

Eileen Roscina’s Shelter on display at the Arvada Center.
Photo by Eileen Roscina.

In a culture obsessed with speed and output, Denver artist Eileen Roscina works in reverse. She hand-processes analogue film, harvests materials from her garden, and builds her sculptural works one willow branch at a time. We sat down with her to talk about risk, ritual, and why slowing down might be the most radical creative act of all.

The long road back: “My path has been non-linear, to say the least. When I was a girl, I wanted to be an artist. Somewhere along the way, I started to believe that I wasn’t good enough, and abandoned art completely. I began to draw the food I was making, then studied formally how to illustrate plants at the School of Botanical Arts and Illustration, which was the springboard for my career as an artist. Now, I’m a full-time artist, mom, and teacher.”

On risk and process: “Every time I hand-process film, it feels like a big risk. When entering into the darkness, sometimes you have to trust that there is a way through. When accidents occur, more often than not, they are more interesting than what I had originally planned. I prefer to focus on the process as opposed to the end product.”

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Nature as material and metaphor: “Currently, through the study of biophilia and the use of organic materials, my work explores the tension between states of consciousness and unconsciousness, connection and disconnection, to ourselves and to nature. I challenge our disconnection from the environment and the conventional wisdom of our time being the dream of unending material progress.”

Blue Light cyanotype on cotton rag.
Photo by Eileen Roscina.

Rooted in ritual: “The boundaries between my life and my art are blurred. I draw an enormous amount of inspiration from my garden and grow a significant portion of my art materials. There are thousands of hidden hours of process behind every work, harvesting one willow branch at a time in the winter.”

Motherhood and the work: “After the birth of my son, it became very clear to me that art was interwoven into the fabric of my life. [But] I had to radically shift the way in which I worked, adapting uninterrupted eight-hour studio days to five minutes here and there on top of the kitchen counter, and furiously working during naps. I am realizing that the chaos of making art and raising a kid is not so different.”

Colorado light: “I was born in and grew up in Denver. The glorious Colorado sun has been a gift as a filmmaker.”

Called to create: “I feel a softening at this point in my career, more focused on the process than the outcome. I feel very called to keep making work in this political climate— we need art for context and perspective, it can be a lifeline.”

What lingers: “We have a moral imperative as humans to continue to find wonder in the natural world, even and especially in the face of loss and change. I aim to inspire a deeper sense of care, to slow down for a brief moment to tune in.”

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