London Portraits: Rosa Park
![London Portraits: Rosa Park](http://otiumberg.com/cdn/shop/files/Screenshot_2023-08-09_124237_BANNER_665x310_crop_center.progressive.jpg?v=1691581763)
The founder of travel and style magazine Cereal and the latest muse in our Portrait series, we have long admired Rosa for her pared-back, minimal aesthetic, and Cereal's influence on interior trends over the last decade.
Rosa wearing the Pebble Earrings
"These days, I take any sliver of calm I can access, and that comes in an array of expected and unexpected forms. This includes walking without any distraction to work - no music, no podcast - taking in my surroundings and sifting through my morning thoughts before arriving at the gallery; the 30 seconds spent standing at the kitchen counter, eating a square of chocolate; driving, while looking out at the unblemished blue Californian skies; booking in regular infrared sauna sessions, this is my sacred ritual; taking a yoga class where the breath and movement carries me out of my head and into my body and the present moment. As for inspiration, lately, I’ve found it most in people. There will be encounters with new folks or conversations with old friends that resonate; it then opens up a new way of perceiving and processing information, which is hugely inspiring because our perception dictates our reality."
"At the risk of sounding trite, my mother".
"Francis Gallery works with a dynamic group of contemporary artists who work primarily in abstraction, and the line that connects our artists and our gallery is championing an emotional connection to a work, alongside the cerebral. The gallery vouches for the setting being of equal importance as the artworks being shown; I cannot separate art from its environment when engaging with the pieces, and believe it must be in dialogue with one another.
As for when I shifted my focus from Cereal to Francis, it felt more natural at first, but the deeper I get into gallery work, the more I realise how different the two are. For one, I jumped from a two-dimensional world of print to a three-dimensional world of a physical gallery space with a full programme of exhibitions".
"I think it’s too early in my career to say with certainty what my highs and lows are. I also believe that our perceived failures can become a catalyst for our greatest successes.
All of this is to say, I’d like to answer this question in about 30 years time".
"I would have to say my mother again for this one. I tried many different styles before landing at my current sensibility; and it’s one that is aligned to my mother’s. Understated, androgynous at times, and most importantly, comfortable".
This feels like an impossible question to answer! I have too many favourite pieces, all with significant memory attached to them. How about a top three for this summer season?
1) My yellow thread bracelet with tiny aventurine beads that I got two of, one for me and one for my son Turner; we’ve both been wearing it all summer for good luck!
2) A necklace I made at a recent jewellery making course; it’s actually not very nice looking, but I’m so happy every time I wear it/look at it
3) An opal ring my mum recently gifted me; opal is my birth stone and it’s the first time I’ve had a piece of jewellery with this stone.
Discover more style guides, profiles, events and more