Invisible Habitat explores the sense of belonging and collective memories.

Home Is Where I Could Get Creative Freedom and Be Anything I Wanted  — Anita Rogers

Home Is Where I Could Get Creative Freedom and Be Anything I Wanted — Anita Rogers

 

NAME Anita Rogers
ROLE Anita Rogers Gallery owner and Business Owner
BIRTH CITY Dorset, England
CITIES LIVED IN Clyro, Wales, Swanage, UK, Halki Island, Greece, Otokent, Turkey Athens, Greece, Andros Island, Greece, Dublin, Ireland, Rome, Italy, London, UK, New York, Los Angeles


 

Could you tell us a bit about your life before New York and why you decided to come here?

I was born in Dorset, England, and grew up on a Greek island called Halki. The island wasn’t yet on the map when I lived there, and no one knew about it unless you were familiar with that area. My father, Jack Martin Rogers, was a painter and traveled frequently between England and Greece. This was in the 1960s when everyone backpacked and traveled the world to discover themselves. There was much more freedom back then. He met my mum in Dorset, they had me and we lived there for a few years. We then moved to Wales, where we had a beautiful house. My father always liked big houses with lots of natural light and historic architecture; it didn’t matter where it was, whether it had electricity or hot water but the light had to be a certain way.

After years of traveling back and forth, he couldn’t stand leaving Mum and me in Dorset anymore, so he went to Germany and bought Heidi, our 1971 yellow Volkswagen camper. We sold the house to his brother and drove to Greece together. The camper van was my home for a long time. It was amazing.

 

We journeyed around the Greek Islands during 1981 and searched for a house that had lots of light and was peaceful. One day, as we sailed into the Halki harbor, we saw this beautiful neoclassical house that we called our “peeling palace.” It was a big house with about fifteen rooms and tall columns in the front. My dad immediately wanted to live there and was able to convince the owners to rent it to us cheaply. We called it the “peeling palace” as its white paint was peeling off the walls. It had no electricity or hot water, but it had a lot of light. It was an incredible place.

 
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Eventually, we had to leave Greece to renew our permit on the camper van, and so we moved to Turkey. As foreigners who didn’t speak Turkish, we weren’t welcomed into the community and so we decided to return to England, where we had family. I love England but didn’t enjoy living there. I was bullied at school and didn’t fit in. I just felt different—and not in a good sense. None of us were happy there, so we then moved back to Athens, Greece. Over the next several years, we lived in different cities across Europe. I ended up going back to England for college.

I had always wanted to move to America since I was very young. I instinctively knew I would be happier somewhere more progressive. And that’s why I was attracted to America. I had studied music and trained as an opera singer. When I was a student, you could be an opera singer, a pop singer, or a renaissance singer - but you couldn’t be all those things at once. I had been singing Mediterranean music at night clubs in Turkey and Greece since I was seven - I wanted to be able to sing in all of these ways and not be confined to one type. I always felt America was a country that looked forward, one where I could have creative freedom and be anything I wanted.

 
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What does home mean to you?

New York is home for me. I came here in mid-winter 2003 and the second I landed, I fell in love with the city. I didn’t expect it to be so incredible. The city gave me the feeling that you could achieve anything if you worked hard at it. Greece will always be my home in my heart; it’s the place I love most in the whole world. But New York will always be home for the rest of my life. My apartment here has floor-to-ceiling glass windows, and I can see the Freedom Tower on one side and the Manhattan Bridge and Uptown on the other side. I’ll often stand there at night and feel so grateful to the city. At night, the skyscrapers twinkle with possibilities, and to me, it looks like magic. In some ways, it feels like New York belongs to each one of us.

Do you have any object that you have carried along the way?

My dad’s paintings, sketches, and art pieces. They were all in England, and we shipped them over to New York. I am a harpist, so I carried my harp with me, as well.

 

Art has such a profound effect on us. I feel most of us are constantly either thinking of our past, worrying about things we did wrong, or feeling stress about the future. However, art forces us to be more present, to feel and experience the world in a different way. It is such a freeing feeling, very much how the Greeks love to live. Greece is progressive in many ways; they live in the present. In the now. That’s the reason artists love Greece, too.

 

Do you have memories of your first childhood home?

I had many homes when I was young, but the “peeling palace” is my best memory of a childhood home. It was purely peaceful. I used to wake up very early when Mum and Dad were asleep and play with my toys on the balcony.

 

The house overlooked the sea, and between five and seven in the morning you could see kaikis, fishing boats, headed out for the day. During summer, the sea was blue and looked like glass, and you heard nothing but the peculiar sound of the little red and white boat’s engines as they slowly entered the water. This is such a strong memory. The sea was very close, so I used to go down and dive into the water. In the winter, the waves would hit our top windows. That was my childhood.


All photographs of Anita Rogers were taken in her gallery in SoHo during Robert Szot's exhibition "Then Again, Who Does?”

 
My idea of home is when people are open and accepting — Eric Kt Lau

My idea of home is when people are open and accepting — Eric Kt Lau

Home is a Place Where Things Are Understood and Accepted — Rob Rutherford and Darren Borrino

Home is a Place Where Things Are Understood and Accepted — Rob Rutherford and Darren Borrino