Exhibitions

WALK! at Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt || My First International Exhibition by ellie berry

WALK!

18 FEBRUARY – 22 MAY 2022

The act of walking as a social phenom­enon has gained renewed impor­tance in the twenty-first century. The group exhi­bi­tion WALK! at the SCHIRN provides an overview of walking as a prac­tice in contem­po­rary art produc­tion—a facet that has so far been rarely consid­ered. It exam­ines contem­po­rary explo­rations and expan­sions of Walking Art, which had its origins in the 1960s move­ments of Mini­malism, Land Art, and Concep­tual Art.

The SCHIRN presents more than forty inter­na­tional artists whose work incor­po­rates walking as an essen­tial element. Some one hundred photographs, video works, collages, draw­ings, paint­ings, and sculp­tures, as well as live perfor­mances and partic­i­pa­tory projects in public space aesthet­i­cally inter­twine walking with the chal­lenges of our time, reflect on current debates around issues such as glob­al­iza­tion and climate change and explore forms of protest and demon­stra­tion.

ARTISTS

Bani Abidi, Yuji Agematsu, Allora & Calza­dilla, Fran­cis Alÿs, Daniel Beer­ste­cher, Ellie Berry, James Bridle, Tiffany Chung, Jesse Darling, Michael Dean, Sebastián Díaz Mora­les, Anders Dick­son, Flaneur, Hamish Fulton, Rahima Gambo, Birke Gorm, Hamza Hall­oubi, David Hammons, Yolande Harris, Mona Hatoum, Fabian Herken­hoener, Hiwa K, Michael Höpf­ner, Jan Hostett­ler, Regina José Galindo, Kubra Khademi, Bouchra Khalili, Kimso­oja, Özlem Günyol & Mustafa Kunt, Minouk Lim, Carole McCourt, Helen Mirra, Sohei Nishino, Carmen Papa­lia, Signe Pierce & Alli Coates, Sascha Pohle, Pope.L, Hans Scha­bus, Miae Son, Cheyney Thomp­son, Milica Tomić


In 2019 I went to Greece for a conference - it was the first conference I wrote a paper for, my first international conference, and my first “walking art” conference. Looking back, I can see how formative an experience that trip was - I was almost a year into my research masters, but was only starting to vaguely understand what it was that I had actually signed up to undertake. From those ten days of work/walk-shops and talks, I found my way into examining experiences in more critical ways, and redefined what being an artist meant to me.

My paper presentation was on the last day of the conference, in a small town hall that was only cooler than being out in the greek sunshine in a theoretical way. The actuality of all the bodies probably negated any cooling, but at least I no one was getting sun burnt. Being such a stuffy atmosphere, I didn’t want to make it worse by only reading out sections of my paper - so I included some of my own work, and talked about the experiences that led me to trying to make work in new ways, comparing it to other Irish artists that had gone before me and had similar reactions when depicting the Irish landscape.

This is how Fiona saw my work, and how, eighteen months later, she emailed me to let me know about a show about walking art she was involved with. It was still in the planning stage, so we were just opening up the conversation. More time passed, and each step in the process to having work in the show passed by. Even at the end of 2021, when I was sending in the high resolution files of my work, I didn’t fully believe it would happen. Even seeing a gallery floor-plan mock-up. But my name is on the website, and I’ve booked my flights over to see it.

To have my work in the same show as some names I really admire is - well, maybe this is the part that makes it hard to believe.

I’m excited. Here’s the page on the website.

I’ll be over for the opening (18th of Feb), and will share installation photos after that.

Wish me luck!

Fractured Space by ellie berry

Still from the live fracturing on the opening night of In the Making: 10 Years of Ormond Art Studios

Still from the live fracturing on the opening night of In the Making: 10 Years of Ormond Art Studios

28th Nov - 1st Dec
Projection Installation
Exhibiting at the Dublin Civic Trust Building, 18 Ormond Quay, as part of the Ormond Art Studios’s exhibition In the Making: Celebrating 10 Years at Ormond Art Studios.


Fractured Space is a site specific, projection piece. The space we are exhibiting in is a beautifully restored house, brought back from ruin and into the past, frozen as it once was. Because of this, it’s not possible to interact with the space as I normally would - a gallery space is made to be a canvas that an artist can manipulate to show their ideas and creations to their desired effect. 18 Ormond Quay is a space all of its own. 

Exhibiting in a space that I couldn’t interact with in the typical way lead me to want to create a piece that would change the space without touching it. Previously, I created Fractured Landscapes, a series where I manipulated images to create new places, reflecting on the strange pressures I had placed on the landscape to provide me with a sense of place and connection. Evolving this fracturing to create a new space within the exhibition space felt like a way I could combine this place that I couldn’t change with my work. 

For the opening night this will be a live piece, changing as people interact with it, allowing them to mould the artwork and the space. For the remainder of the exhibition it will be a fractured video I filmed during our time installing our work for the exhibition.


As it says at the top, this exhibition is open until December 1st, from 12:00 - 17:00 each day. For more information about it, check out the Ormond Art Studios website.