Rose Ferraby


Rose Ferraby is an archaeologist and artist based in Aldborough, North Yorkshire, England.

Academic career

Rose Ferraby is a Research Associate in the Faculty of Classics at the University of Cambridge. She is co-director of the Aldborough Roman Town Project. She completed her PhD at the University of Exeter in 2015, entitled 'Stone Exposures: a Cultural Geology of the Jurassic Coast'. Prior to this she worked as an archaeologist for the British School at Rome, where she worked on numerous sites, including Falacrinae, the birthplace of Vespasian. Her expertise includes Roman Britain and using digital techniques to understand landscapes, publishing on photogrammetry on the Jurassic Coast. Ferraby has also published on archaeological landscapes of rainforest in Sarawak, part of a collaborative project at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge, as well as on the surveys of Roman Aldborough.
Additional qualifications include an MFA from Edinburgh College of Art and a BA in Archaeology from the University of Cambridge.

Creative career

As well as archaeology, Ferraby explores the landscape histories through creative practice. She collaborated with archaeologist Mark Edmonds on the 2013 publication 'Stonework' which examined prehistoric landscapes in Cumbria through poetry and art. Other collaborations include with Common Ground to produce a tree map of Exeter in 2016 and in 2019 a collaboration with sound artist Rob St. John. This project examined the sub-surface landscapes of Aldborough Roman town through field recording, print-making and illustration to produce a walkable trail exploring the site.
BBC Radio 3 invited her to present a programme on gypsum in 2018, as a result of her interdisciplinary approach to art and archaeology. In addition she writes on how the intersection between the two informs her practice across both disciplines.