Walker Art Center opens major exhibition of Sophie Calle, featuring iconic bodies of work and lesser-known pieces
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Walker Art Center opens major exhibition of Sophie Calle, featuring iconic bodies of work and lesser-known pieces
Installation view of Sophie Calle: Overshare. Photo by Eric Mueller. Courtesy Walker Art
Center.



MINNEAPOLIS, MN.- The Walker Art Center opened Sophie Calle: Overshare, the first North American exhibition to explore the full range of the artist’s practice across the past five decades. Through examples of major bodies of work as well as lesser-known pieces, the exhibition captures the ways in which Calle’s early work anticipated the rise of social media as a space to shape and present lived experience. The exhibition features photography, text-based works, video, and installations, highlighting the artist’s efforts to probe the boundaries between public and private; truth and fiction; control and chance. Overshare is the first large-scale exhibition to engage North American audiences with the significance of Calles’ recurring themes, and to capture their ongoing relevance to contemporary experiences and dialogues about our digitally mediated world. 

Sophie Calle: Overshare will be on view at the Walker through January 26, 2025. It is curated by Henriette Huldisch, the Walker’s Chief Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs, in close collaboration with the artist. It is accompanied by an expansive catalog that includes essays by Huldisch, Eugenie Brinkema, Aruna D’Souza, and Courtenay Finn. Following the Walker presentation, the exhibition travels to the Orange County Museum of Art.

Calle has been working since the late 1970s and has come to be recognized for her signature approach of pairing photographs and text. Her work also embraces video and object-based work. Throughout her practice, she uses the tactics associated with surveillance and voyeurism to examine the complex nature of human relationships, especially notions and experiences of love, trust, intimacy, and power. Inspired early on by the American photographer Duane Michals—whose photographic works her father collected and which often incorporated handwritten notes—Calle has leveraged her chosen media to document the interactions and emotional expressions of both loved ones and strangers alike. Her mining of interpersonal dynamics, and interest in questions of visibility, disappearance, and manifestations of the self, are the throughlines of Overshare, with the title itself offering both a strategic conceit and provocation. 

“Calle is not on social media. It is not a sphere in which she presents her work, or is even particularly interested in. Rather, she works in analogue media, in the form of printed books as well as framed photographs with texts on the gallery wall,” said Huldisch. “And yet, her approach, which lives at the nexus of photography and autobiographical writing, has consistently engaged in different strategies of self-exposure. In this way, her practice presciently foreshadowed modes of performance and staged intimacy now prominent throughout literary autofiction, reality TV, and social media. This is in part what makes her work so timely and resonant for a broad audience.”

The exhibition unfolds across four galleries organized in different thematic sections, titled “The Spy,” “The Protagonist,” “The End,” and “The Beginning.” It includes a selection of acclaimed, iconic works, including The Sleepers (1979) and Suite Vénitienne (1980), which capture Calle’s early fascination with the real and imagined stories of people’s lives and interactions, as well as lesser-known projects such as the photographic series Cash Machine (1991-2003) and the related video Unfinished (2005). Begun in 1988 at the invitation of a Minneapolis bank to make a work for their art collection, the series revolves around ghostly black-and-white photos of people withdrawing money from an ATM outfitted with a camera. Calle never completed the commission but spent over ten years grappling with the material. In Unfinished, she describes her inability to finish the project. The commission, and the story behind it, offer insight into the importance of both narrative and interpersonal exchange to Calle’s practice.

At the core of the exhibition are Calle’s Autobiographies, an ongoing series that the artist began in the late 1980s. Each two-part work includes a framed photograph alongside a framed descriptive text. In the complementary True Stories series, Calle pairs these stories with an object rather than a photograph. In either permutation, the short vignettes chronicle episodes from Calle’s life, ranging from incidental interactions and minor embarrassments to romantic breakups and loss. Regardless of subject, the Autobiographies are presented in Calle’s characteristic style: concise, sometimes improbable, and often very funny. The section dedicated to autobiography in Overshare also includes the feature-length film Double-Blind (1992). Produced with Calle’s then partner, filmmaker Greg Shephard, the piece captures the couple’s precarious relationship during a road trip from New York to San Francisco. Blending home movie and road movie tropes, Calle and Shephard train their cameras on each other while they traverse a largely interchangeable American landscape of motels, diners, and auto shops, with each also recording private thoughts and shared scenes on a camcorder. This film—playing with vulnerability and voyeurism—presages our cultural obsession with reality dating series like The Bachelor, which captures the highs and lows of dating on camera along with the private perspectives of its protagonists in solo interviews with producers. 

A group of autobiographical works considering the deaths of her charismatic parents, as well as her own mortality, comprise a dedicated section in the exhibition. The installation North Pole (2009) combines framed works and video from a trip to the Arctic in 2008. In the work, Calle pays tribute to her mother Monique, who never fulfilled her wish to visit the pole, by leaving some of her belongings in the ground. Additionally, the wall configuration My Mother, My Father and Me (2024) includes the Autobiography capturing how Calle accidentally called her deceased father’s mobile phone and received the following text message in response, “Who r u.” In the work, she wryly concludes that Bob, her father, had sent her a message. These works also all speak to an ongoing thread related to absence with the artist’s practice. 

The exhibition concludes with two large-scale installations, Voir la mer (2011) and On the Hunt (2020/2024), which while distinct in subject matter engage with underlying ideas of longing. The newest work in the exhibition, On the Hunt features a compendium of personal ads that have been published in the classifieds section of the French hunting magazine Le Chasseur Français since 1895. For the installation, Calle selected two groups of approximately 15 classifieds each for various time periods, which she combined into a text panel, framed, and installed as a diptych, with texts by women and men presented next to each other. Mounted above these panels are photographs of hunting stands in the landscape and nighttime surveillance images of animals. The combination of elements draws a barbed connection between hunting for prey and for romantic companions. 

“Visitors to the exhibition will inevitably find work that feels familiar even if they’ve never previously engaged with the artist. Her work is so much about our daily experiences: humor, curiosity, love, heartbreak, and loss. Overshare is about exploring these universal, human touchpoints and the ways in which Calle has brought them forward in a singularly distinct way,” added Huldisch.










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