Associate Professor Emma Robertson
BA (Honours) Glasgow School of Art
MA Manchester Metropolitan University
PhD The University of Sydney
Artworks by Dr Emma Robertson are held internationally in eight public collections in four countries, including the Hospital Trust for Scotland, who purchased two artworks commissioned by the Scottish Arts Council for the exhibition Wordworks. In 2023 her work was installed as public art across 12 walls of the Prince of Wales Hospital Acute Services Building on Level 8 Neurosciences: /news/2023/04/art-inspires-health-and-well-being-in-new-hospital
Emma is serving on the Journal Board of Memory, Mind & Media as an Associate Editor, and she is the Artist in Residence for this new interdisciplinary publication (Cambridge University Press)ÌýÌý
SheÌýis one of fifteen founding Scientia Education Fellows, appointed by the DVC and PVC for a five year period to establish the interdisciplinary Scientia Education Academy. In 2018, Emma received theÌýPostgraduate Research Supervisor Award, endorsed by the PVC Research Training and the Dean of Graduate Research.ÌýIn 2014 EmmaÌýwas awarded both the Art & Design Faculty Dean's Sustained Teaching Excellence, and the UNSW Vice-Chancellor's Teaching Excellence Awards. Previously in 2008 sheÌýwon the Dean's Award for Innovative Teaching for her two University wide creative thinking online courses.Ìý
Emma has exhibited in 8Ìýcountries (Norway, Italy, France, USA, UK, Germany, Czech Republic and Australia) andÌýwas selected as the Artist in Residence at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney, which continued her drawing series exploring endangered plant species in a time of climate crisis. This culminated in a solo exhibition at the Red Box Gallery in the Domain, Sydney which was held in February-March 2009, where 27 mixed media drawings were displayed. The exhibition, called Ascendant and Descendant explored the impact of climate change on rare and endangered Australian flora, and reflected the research work undertaken by scientists at the RBG. In 2017 Emma completedÌýher PhD at TheÌýUniversity of Sydney, which extendedÌýthis research with work developed from visits to Kew, the Millennium Seed Bank, the Royal Botanic Gardens Edinburgh, and other locations.
Work from this research has been used by Cambridge University Press in a 2021 journal cover design, byÌýOxford University Press in a 2017 book cover design, and in 2018 as illustrations throughout Memory in the Head and in the Wild: Interdisciplinarity in Memory StudiesÌý (Professor Amanda Barnier and Professor Andrew Hoskins).
An article on Emma's current research on ecopsychology and ecoanxiety appears in Issue 4 of the Unlikely Journal for Creative ArtsÌý (Transitions: Biophilia, Beauty and Herbaria, ISSN 2205-0027 The University of Melbourne, La Trobe University, Victoria College of the Arts, September 2018) and Drawing: Research, Theory, Practice - A Sense of Coherence: Drawing for the Mind
Emma has held a number of senior administrative roles including Program Director of the Bachelor of Design degree for five years, three terms as Presiding Member of Faculty, and Deputy President of the UNSW Academic Board.ÌýShe researches across two distinct areas. In her teaching she investigates theories of mapping and modelling thinking, and new developments in creative thinking processes as applied to global problem solving. In her practice she explores the relationships between words, objects and memory in mixed media drawings, installations and bookworks. She teaches into both the Art and Design Domains.
In addition to teaching creative thinking to undergraduate and postgraduate students in nine Faculties at UNSW, Emma also teaches content relating to the influence of scientific illustration techniques on design processes, including those used in the film industry. In exploringÌýthis she has conducted primary research atÌýSkywalker Ranch during the conceptual preproduction work on the Star Wars movies, at Industrial Light and Magic, at Pixar and Animal Logic (at Fox Film Studios in Sydney). Her interview of Star Wars concept designer Iain McCaig has been viewed more than 112,000 times on YouTube (see link below). Her three interviews of Paul Topolos from Pixar have been collectively viewed more than 24,443 times. She has been involved in Executive Education with engineers at Thiess, design staff at the Natural History Museum, London, The Agile Leader course at UTS, and others. Emma researched and worked for three years as a consultant to Arup 2010-2013 to integrate creative thinking processes into their Staff Development initiatives and internal Design School, including a Moodle Course offered to their 17,000+ employees around the world. SheÌýconvened and lectured the large Master of Design core course Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Creativity overÌýa three year period.
Emma is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, London and was Visiting Fellow at the Centre for Drawing, Wimbledon College of Art. In 2011 Emma was Guest Editor of the TRACEY Journal on Drawing Knowledge, Loughborough University, and in 2012 was Chair of the Drawing Knowledge Conference where she was one of four Keynote speakers. In 2013-2016 sheÌýtaught Tools for Creative Thinking to postgraduate students in the Design for Social Innovation course at the Centre for Social Impact, and gaveÌýguest lectures to PhD students in Engineering and at the INSPIRE NSW symposium. In 2016 she was one of a small team of academics who developed and worked on the MOOC Transmedia Storytelling: Narrative worlds, emerging technologies, and global audiences. The international course explores content relating toÌýthe practice of designing, sharing, and participating in a cohesive story experience across multiple traditional and digital delivery platforms - for entertainment, advertising and marketing, or social change. By July 2024 the course had attracted 110,496 total learners/enrolments, with a 4.7/5 general approval rating, and 98% approval for the course content:
In 2019 Emma presented her research outcomes at conferences at the University of Loughborough and the University of Worcester in the UK. In 2006 EmmaÌýwas awarded one of the seven prizes in the International Biennial of Drawing, Europe. The three selected drawings were subsequently chosen for the touring Best of the International Drawing Biennial exhibition, which was exhibited at the International Currents Gallery, Chicago, USA in 2007 and in four other European locations. Emma was subsequently selected for the 2008, 2010 and 2012 International Biennials of Drawing, and her work was featured in the book of Laureates published in 2015. Her work has also been selected for the Adelaide Perry Prize for Drawing and the Jacaranda Acquisitive Drawing Prize in Australia.
Links:
2019 The University of Sydney, Reflection and Respite Exhibition:
2017 Cover Artwork: Collaborative Remembering: Theories, Research and Applications:
Short Films:Ìý
Robertson E, 2017, MicrographiaÌý
Robertson E, 2017, Deposition LinesÌý
Graduated Research Students:
Finlay D, 2015, The Creative Behind the Design: A Phenomenological Investigation into the Lived Experience of Leading Creative Practitioners, M PhilÌýThesis, UNSW
Robson, S, 2016, Between Certainty and Chance: Creativity as a Knowledge Acquisition Phenomenon - How an Art Process Negotiates Uncertainty, M Phil Thesis, UNSW
Bates, G, 2018,ÌýMagical Resistance: Witchcraft in an age of rapid urban transformation, MFA Thesis, UNSW
Patterson, K, 2021, Process: a practice-based exploration of the tacit dimensions of a 3D computer biomedical animator (Joint Supervision with Assoc Prof John McGhee), M Phil Thesis, UNSW
- Publications
- Media
- Grants
- Awards
- Research Activities
- Engagement
- Teaching and Supervision
Interview in 2022 by Professor Amanda Barnier discussing Emma's Artist in Residence and Associate Editor roles for the Cambridge University Press Journal Memory, Mind & Media:
My Research Supervision
Giles Alexander, PhD candidate
Kristy Gordon, PhD candidate
Eva Nolan, PhD candidate
Jeremy Smith, PhD candidate