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Francis Alÿs
Seven Walks
28 September - 20 November 2005
21 Portman Square, London W1
and the National Portrait Gallery, London WC2
An Artangel Commission kindly
supported by Bloomberg.
A journey implies a destination,
so many miles to be consumed, while a walk is its own measure,
complete at every point along the way. Francis Alÿs
Francis Alÿs walks a lot.
He walks the streets of the world's largest metropolis, Mexico
City, where he has made his home for the past 15 years. He has
also walked the streets of Copenhagen, Sao Paulo, Jerusalem and
London. Observing and intervening in this huge open-air studio,
Alÿs maps the city, staging elusive scenarios and making
poetic films and animations. His work can be as monumental as
moving an immense sand dune (a project he undertook with a thousand
people in Lima), as ephemeral as sending a postcard or as subtly
humorous as having a peacock take his place at an important gathering
of his peers.
Over the past 5 years, Alÿs
has been walking the streets of London, evolving Seven Walks
an ambitious new project for Artangel which delves into the everyday
rituals and habits of the metropolis. The walks are enacted in
different parts of the city - Hyde Park, the City of London,
the National Portrait Gallery, the streets close to Regents Park.
The ensuing films, videos, paintings and drawings are presented
together in Alÿs' first major public presentation in Britain.
Alÿs' Railings explores the rhythmic possibilities
afforded by a characteristic feature of Regency London, its railings.
Guards follows sixty-four individual Coldstream Guards
as they move through the Square Mile of London. In Ice4Milk
slide images of a large block of ice being pushed through the
streets of Mexico City are juxtaposed with the morning delivery
of milk bottles to London doorsteps. Pebble Walk is Alÿs'
postcard homage to Richard Long based on a walk Alÿs took
through Hyde Park in 1999. The Nightwatch uses surveillance
to observe a nocturnal visitation in the Tudor and Georgian rooms
of the National Portrait Gallery.
Seven Walks is presented within two distinctive
London buildings. Drawings, paintings, photographs and videos
- are presented within the faded grandeur of one of the great
neo-classical buildings on Portman Square designed by James Adam
in the late 18th century. The Nightwatch will be
presented in the Main Hall of the National Portrait Gallery.
Born in Antwerp in 1959 Francis
Alÿs trained as an architect. Following a period of study
in Venice he decided both to leave Europe and to discontinue
his work as an architect. He relocated to Mexico City where he
has lived and worked for the past 15 years.
Recent large-scale projects by
Alÿs include The Modern Procession realised to mark
the temporary move of the Museum of Modern Art in New York in
2001 and When Faith Moves Mountains, a major "land
art" project in the hills above Lima in 2002. Alongside
these public actions, Alÿs continues to make more improvised
projects as well as exquisite paintings and drawings. His exhibition
Ten Blocks from My Studio is currently on show at the
Museum of Contemporary Art in Barcelona. In 2004 Alÿs was
the inaugural winner of the Blue Orange Prize in Berlin.
For further information and
images please contact Janette Scott, Head of Press and Publicity
at Artangel on js@artangel.org.uk
or 020 7713 1400.
The film is currently available
on the Channel
4 website.
Notes to Editors
1. Francis Alys: Seven
Walks at 21 Portman Square is open Tuesday - Sunday: 11.00
- 7.00 pm and 9pm on Thursdays. Closed Mondays. Free Admission.
Information line 020 7713 1402.
2. The National Portrait Gallery is open daily 10am - 6pm and
until 9pm Thursdays and Fridays. Free admission to The Nightwatch
project, located in the Main Hall of the Gallery.
3. With thanks to: The Portman Estate and Godfrey Vaughan for
making available 21 Portman Square; The Outset Contemporary Art
Fund, The Felix Trust for Art, The Robbins Foundation, The Moose
Foundation for the Arts and Mary Moore for support in realising
the individual Walks, and The Elephant Trust for supporting the
initial research and development of the project. Thanks also
to the Lisson Gallery and the National Portrait Gallery.
4. Seven Walks, the publication is supported by The Henry
Moore Foundation.
5. Artangel is supported by Arts Council England, London, The
Company of Angels and the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation. For
further information about Artangel see www.artangel.org.uk.
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