Working across film, installation, and community action, artist Gregory Herbert seeks to

explore the spaces between species. His practice centres on collaboration with both

human and more-than-human participants, asking how we can engage and activate

support within an ecosystem in a way that avoids extractivism, and looking instead to

models of mutuality and solidarity.


Film is a key ongoing strand to Herbert’s practice, combining a digital vernacular with

more recent investigations into sustainable methods of film production. Herbert often

utilises film-making as part of his research process, developing projects through

ongoing practice and experimentation. Practice, research, and content are closely

interwoven, informing each other in a continual feedback loop that echoes the

symbiotic cycles of the more-than-human world.


There are further parallels between Herbert’s approach to collaborating with other

artists and practitioners on the one hand, and the role of cross-species collaboration

on the other. He is interested in interrogating the spaces between species, while

considering the complex ethics of working within those spaces. These are the places

where symbiosis takes place, such as the meeting points of plants and fungi for

nutrient exchange, which are essential for the continuation of life on earth.


Herbert repeatedly questions how he can engage with people about the spaces

we’re living in, and the wider implications of the systems we live under, attempting to

make those conversations open and inclusive. He works both within and outside of a

gallery setting, as well as through Chopping Club, a cooking and eating group

examining food production systems run in partnership with Niamh Riordan.


He is developing his current project The Hum as a form of abstract opera, taking

inspiration from the etymological root of the word “opera” which means “work”.

Incorporating collaborations with a sound designer and a choir, the project

foregrounds the work and resurgence of multi-species assemblages. Through The

Hum, Herbert draws on the potential for storytelling outside of the gallery space,

considering how interacting with people in this hybrid context might create action

around issues such as species loss and the climate crisis, or prompt radical thought

about our relationships with surrounding ecologies.


Contact; Gregoryherbertart@gmail.com
@Gregoryherbertart