Broadcast Corporeal (2005)

As a creative director, illustrator and founder of VisionCurate, a 360° creative studio powered entirely by women and non-binary artists, Roxie brings bold ideas, underrepresented voices and multidisciplinary talent together.
Roxie has built a career defined by creative collaboration and cultural impact. Her roots are in painting and music, but she’s never limited herself to one form. Early on, she began curating exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery and later expanded her reach beyond traditional spaces to spotlight emerging artistic talent around the world.

You probably don’t know this (because it is literally not written anywhere), but Roxie is the illustrator behind Disclosure’s iconic “face” from their Settle album—an image that became instantly recognizable in electronic music. Her work has also appeared in many magazines like Rolling Stone, Dazed, Creative Review and more. Since then, she has led major creative projects for global artists, including her work as Head of Creative Projects for FKA twigs. Roxie has produced video, animation and other content for international campaigns with brands like Nike, Stella McCartney, Adidas, Off-White, Hermès and Google.

Most recently, she produced an epic mural installation for Jay-Z’s retrospective at the Brooklyn Central Library—a career-defining moment that further solidified her reputation as a visionary across disciplines.
You get it: Roxie’s creativity defies convention. She once glided through the roller disco scene, and movement remains a vital part of her life. For Roxie, art and music aren’t just passions—they’re the lens through which she experiences the world.
When we asked her for a track for The Rest, she sent us “Corporeal” by Broadcast with the words: “Next generations need to know about Trish Keenan. RIP a special one.”
It’s a haunting yet dreamy track—one that stays with you long after it ends. Roxie chose it as a tribute to Broadcast’s late frontwoman, whose experimental sound and singular voice helped shape a corner of music that’s still deeply felt today.
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