The artists have together experienced one another’s sources of inspiration, including places and spaces where humanity and nature come into contact in unexpected ways. To date these have included Anderson boat lift, a wishing well in Alderley Edge and Yordas Cave in Ingleton. Guiding the artists’ research and overall exhibition are shared interests in the complex entanglement of human and non-human worlds, and testing the boundaries between the natural and artificial, making and material, intention and accident.
Selected and commissioned works featured in It Requires Getting Lost will span film, photography, painting, sound, projection mapping, and sculpture. A diverse group of works, together they point to what can be discovered in embracing the unknown. The exhibition will ask if we can resist the drive to want to be all knowing and to have all the answers, and instead accept not knowing. What might we learn? If we ‘get lost’, might we discover, see, and hear anew, including what nature has to share with us?
It Requires Getting Lost will take over Castlefield Gallery, with the works and installation playing with the context of the venue’s architecture, creating a cave-like, subterranean feel. Conceived as a dark, underground space, the exhibition invites us to leave behind the hard-edged clarity of categories and distinctions and descend into a place of murky yet wondrous possibility.