When I Walk

Artist: Jessica Auer

In When I Walk, Jessica Auer transforms Swan Park into a slow, choreographed journey — a walk that becomes an artwork in itself. Her installation takes shape as a sequence of large‑scale photographic panels placed along a deliberate path through the park. As visitors follow this route, they cross a series of visual and conceptual thresholds: moving from the familiar landscape around them into images of distant coastlines, remote ruins, and terrains shaped by histories far beyond Inishowen.

Each photograph acts like a doorway — opening onto places marked by migration, colonial encounters, surveillance architectures, and the quiet persistence of ruins. The images are accompanied by short fragments of text that invite visitors to reflect on walking as a form of attention: the rhythm of steps, the movement of breath, and the sensation of time stretching between geological pasts and imagined futures.

Auer’s work emerges directly from her time in Swan Park, from conversations with the curator, and from her long‑standing research into walking as a way of knowing. Walking becomes a threshold between body and landscape, between perception and memory, between where we stand and the wider world we belong to. Her practice also draws resonance from northern sites — Canada, Ireland, Iceland — where coastlines operate as boundaries, markers of conflict, and symbols of possibility.

In this way, When I Walk brings the visitor into a state of slow noticing. It turns Swan Park into an unfolding narrative, where each step carries the visitor across subtle borders: between here and elsewhere, past and present, local and global. The work asks us to consider how landscapes hold stories of power, progress, and displacement — and how walking can open a threshold through which those stories become felt rather than simply observed.

As part of the broader exhibition, Auer’s installation invites visitors to inhabit the threshold physically — to move through it with intention, and to recognise walking as both an intimate practice and a way of crossing into new ways of seeing

Jessica Auer is a Canadian photographer, filmmaker and educator, who works from a decommissioned fish factory in Seydisfjördur, Iceland. Her work is broadly concerned with the study of landscapes as cultural sites. Through a research-based practice, she examines our social, political and aesthetic attitudes towards place, including but not limited to – historical sites, tourist destinations, and small communities.
Working mainly with large format photography, Jessica is best known for her tableau-style photographs that examine the ways in which landscapes have been preserved, altered or commodified for sightseeing. Through these photographs, she expresses a deep concern for nature and the vulnerability of remote sites and communities when confronted with mass tourism. Her images aim to reveal the geo-political realities surrounding travel and the paradox of attempting to preserve the same landscapes that the industry often seeks to exploit. 

Jessica received her MFA from Concordia University in Montréal, where she teaches part-time in the Photography department. Her work has been presented in several museums, galleries and festivals, such as the Canadian Center for Architecture, The Reykjavík Museum of Photography and the COTM photography festival in Cortona, Italy. 

Jessica has been awarded grants and prizes for photography, art and cinema, and has been featured by Prefix Photo (Canada), Femmes Photographes (Paris), Radio Canada International, ARTE television network, and the Guardian. As her work often responds to place, she has participated in several residency programs including the Banff Centre in Canada, The Brucebo Foundation in Gotland and Bær Art Center in Iceland. Jessica was most recently awarded a residency with Artlink at Fort Dunree in Ireland. 

While in Iceland, Jessica runs Ströndin Studio, an organization dedicated to research and education in the field of photography. 

 

Artist Talk & Walk at Swan Park & Barrick Hill

Saturday 2nd May 2026

Book for the bus tour now