Francis Alÿs

Seven Walks, London, 2005
Texts by Francis Alÿs, Robert Harbison, David Toop, Interview with the artist by James Lingwood

Publisher: Artangel.

Hardcover, 21.6 x 29.2 cm, 144 pages, English

 

Francis Alÿs walks a lot. He walks the streets of the world’s largest metropolis, Mexico City, where he has made his home for almost twenty 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 five hundred people in Lima, Peru), as ephemeral as sending a postcard or as subtly humorous as having a peacock take Alÿs' place at an important gathering of his peers.

 

Over a span of five years, Alÿs walked the streets of London, evolving Seven Walks for Artangel, a project which delved into the everyday rituals and habits of the metropolis. The walks were enacted in different parts of the city – Hyde Park, the City of London, the National Portrait Gallery, the streets close to Regents Park. Three of the walks – GuardsThe Nightwatch and Railings – were made with Alÿs’s long-term collaborator Rafael Ortega. The ensuing films, videos, paintings and drawings were presented together in Alÿs’s first major public presentation in Britain, and continue to be presented internationally.