From the series Rågsved © Angelica Elliott.
Article by Michael Grieve.
Angelica Elliott arrived in Rågsved, a southern suburb of Stockholm, seven years ago. Almost immediately, she started taking pictures. Initially, she was shooting without any clear direction and with no real experience of the medium, but “wanted new pictures in my head”, she explains. “I was dealing with post-traumatic stress and I wanted to know myself. Photography helped me and developed into my therapy. It felt important to show my place, and my place within my place.”
As she became acquainted with the area, Elliott began to assist JH Engström and Margot Wallard with their workshop project, Atelier Smedsby, a non-academic one-year photography programme in Paris. “We had a friend in common who introduced us at a bar in Stockholm, in 2013,” she explains. “I remember I was upset at not being accepted to a photography school and my friend thought this could open some doors for me.” Engström and Wallard mentored Elliott. She gained invaluable experience from the photographers, curators, publishers and writers they associated with on a professional and social level, including Anders Petersen, Nan Goldin, Jim Goldberg, Gilou Le Gruiec, Todd Hido and Christian Caujolle, to name but a few. Engström in particular took a keen interest in Elliott’s work as it began to take shape. “I have followed Angelica and her project since she started it,” he says. “We have talked and shared a lot over those years. Almost never specifically about Rågsved, but more about longing, love, loss and death. In all our conversations, I have had a feeling of total honesty from her side. This is unusual and beautiful. What we have talked about and shared could have taken place anywhere. For Angelica it took place in Rågsved. In her universe.”
Elliott’s compulsion to document and form new narratives takes form in her first monograph, published by Journal – a Swedish photobook publisher. Titled Rågsved, the book shares its name with the town that partly inspired it. It is a compendium of photographs that oscillate between two spaces: the interior and ordinariness of Elliott’s life, from waking up in the morning and looking out of the window of her high-rise apartment, to having friends over for drinks and late nights; and the exterior world outside, the built-up environment and people that comprise Rågsved itself.
However, Rågsved is more than a sensitive, diaristic collection of photographs from this location. It is also a visual expression tempered with an underlying need to connect with the immediacy of an undramatic reality. The familiar can seem mundane, yet on closer inspection, the dwellings sparkle with a salience hitherto unnoticed; shifts of light, shade and colour conjuring phenomena in constant flux. The dormant bike on the balcony that has weathered the seasons embodies time passing; a baking tray left to dry on the kitchen sink gleams with sunlight. Everyday objects momentarily develop a personality, inanimate yet alive.
A strong sensibility emanates from the pages of the book, suggesting there is something hidden within its fabric. The images mix colour with monochrome – Elliott describes their hue as “emotional colour” – and various camera formats frame them. Handwritten texts scribbled on Polaroids punctuate the otherwise visual flow. We learn that the work was born from a tragic loss, one that occurred in her early twenties, when Elliott found her boyfriend dead in their apartment after he had taken his own life. The situation was traumatic and disorientating for Elliott and resulted in her move to Rågsved. She was searching for a fresh perspective and a way to heal.
Read full article on British Journal of Photography.
Rågsved is published by Journal and is available now.