It Requires Getting Lost
Exhibition
It Requires Getting Lost
01 November 2025 - 22 February 2026
Castlefield Gallery
Preview – Thursday 30 October, 6-8pm
Booking is not required, but it helps us organise the preview better if you do: register here
Saturday Slow Preview – Saturday 1 November
Book a time slot here
Book a timed visit with additional restricted capacity in the gallery and enjoy our new exhibition at your own pace. Refreshments will be provided.
Artists:
Magdalena Abakanowicz, Noemie Goudal, Gregory Herbert, Pierre Huyghe, Malik Jama, Leon Kossoff, Jocelyn McGregor, Wolfgang Tillmans
It Requires Getting Lost is the result of a unique partnership between the Roberts Institute of Art (RIA), Venture Arts and Castlefield Gallery. Three artists working in the North of England –– Gregory Herbert, Malik Jama and Jocelyn McGregor –– have been invited by the partner organisations to work in dialogue with one another and in response to major works from one of the UK’s most significant private collections, the David and Indrė Roberts Collection (managed by RIA). These major works, co-selected by all involved, will be featured in the exhibition.
Spending time with the collection commenced a research period designed to support Herbert, Jama and McGregor to develop new work for the exhibition at Castlefield Gallery. These new works will be exhibited alongside the works by Magdalena Abakanowicz, Noemie Goudal, Pierre Huyghe, Leon Kossoff, and Wolfgang Tillmans from the David and Indrė Roberts Collection. Sharing and exploring together has shaped Hebert, Jama and McGregor’s development process.
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.
The exhibition proposes that in the dark of not knowing we might actually find hope, and that with humility we can better respond to the challenges of our changing world. The exhibition’s title is taken from a phrase used by philosopher and activist Bayo Akomolafe from an interview the artists and partners read together during the project. It suggests that getting lost together can catalyse true transformation and deeper understanding of the many paths we can take to live more responsively and responsibly in a world that is continually changing.
The whole project has been infused with positivity and curiosity from the start, offering the artists an opportunity to visit outdoor locations from Hulme Community Garden Centre to Stonehenge as well as exploring some of the most significant works of art from the 20th and 21st centuries in the David and Indrė Roberts Collection. Their time together will lead to an exhibition that invites us to wonder amongst art works that encourage us to be at ease with the unknown and to embrace the unfamiliar offerings of our natural world.
It Requires Getting Lost is commissioned and produced by Castlefield Gallery, the Roberts Institute of Art and Venture Arts, with additional support from the Brian Mercer Trust and The Haworth Trust. Castlefield Gallery and Venture Arts are generously funded by Arts Council England and Manchester City Council.
Partners:

Funders:

Partner Funders:

RELATED PUBLIC EVENT PROGRAMME
REMEMBER NATURE 2025
4 November 2025
Remember Nature 2025
04 November 2025
Across Manchester and Hulme Community Garden Centre
Join us in ‘standing up for nature’ on 4 November 2025! Take part in free artist-led city walks, nature-aware gatherings, and share your treasured aspects of the natural world for others to discover.
In 2015 artist Gustav Metzger called on art schools and students of all disciplines to “Remember Nature” and “make a stand against the ongoing erasure of species”. Tuesday
4 November 2025 marks a decade since that call, and partners across England are coming together, bringing ethics into aesthetics, for Remember Nature 2025. You can find out more about all national programmes, artists, and partners here. Castlefield Gallery is delighted to be one of the 17 regional arts partners across England contributing to this significant moment, working with artist Yu-Chen Wang to mark the anniversary in Manchester and the city region.
Links
More about Gregory Herbert
gregoryherbert.co.ukMore about Malik Jama
venturearts.org/artists/malik-jamaMore about Jocelyn McGregor
jocelynmcgregor.comMore about Venture Arts
venturearts.orgMore about The Roberts Institute of Art
therobertsinstituteofart.comDownloads
It Requires Getting Lost Press Release
3823.5361328125kbImages
Banner:
- Gregory Herbert in collaboration with Professor Katie J. Field, Making-with, 2021. Film still.
From left to right, top to bottom:
- Jocelyn McGregor, DREDGED, site-specific multimedia installation at The Windermere Jetty Museum (in partnership with Arts&Heritage at Lakeland Arts), 2022. Photographed by Jules Lister.
- Malik Jama, Glow, 2023. RHS Bridgwater.
- Gregory Herbert, Entangled Ways of Being, 2022. Castlefield Gallery. Photographed by Rob Battersby.
- Jocelyn McGregor, Vale, site-specific installation at Forth, Nottingham; 2021. Photographed by Adam Grainger.
- Malik Jama, Something On The Wall, 2022. Projection mapping.
- Leon Kossoff, Small City Landscape, Evening, 1956. Courtesy the David and Indrė Roberts Collection and the Leon Kossoff Estate. © Leon Kossoff Estate. Photographed by Prudence Cuming Associates.