Sophie Calle: Overshare, on view from January 31 to May 24, 2026, presents the first major North American survey to fully explore the scope of Sophie Calle’s influential career. Spanning five decades, the exhibition traces how Calle has consistently placed herself at the center of her work, using her own experiences as both material and method. Long before digital platforms normalized public confession, Calle was already probing the fragile boundary between private life and public display. Through photography, text, video, and installation, her work reveals how storytelling, observation, and intimacy can become artistic strategies—inviting viewers into narratives that feel at once personal and unsettling.
At the heart of
Overshare lies a sustained reflection on self-disclosure and its inherent contradictions. Calle’s projects often begin with a simple gesture—following a stranger, documenting a relationship, or exposing a personal loss—but quickly unfold into complex investigations of trust, consent, and voyeurism. These works do not merely reveal the artist’s life; they implicate the viewer, activating curiosity and discomfort in equal measure. By foregrounding acts of looking, recording, and recounting, Calle raises enduring questions about surveillance and intrusion, issues that resonate strongly in a contemporary culture shaped by constant visibility and performance.
Organized by the Walker Art Center and presented at the UC Irvine Langson Orange County Museum of Art,
Sophie Calle: Overshare situates Calle’s practice within a broader cultural conversation about identity, authorship, and ethics. Her work feels strikingly prescient, anticipating how social media would later transform everyday life into curated narrative. Yet it also remains deeply rooted in conceptual traditions, emphasizing structure, repetition, and chance encounters. This exhibition offers a rare opportunity to engage with Calle’s art in its full complexity, encouraging viewers to reconsider how stories are told, shared, and consumed—and what is at stake when the line between observer and subject quietly dissolves.
Image:
Sophie Calle, Autobiographies (Dead in a Good Mood) (detail), 2013, digital print and text panel, framed photo: 19 7/8 x 19 7/8 in. (50.5 x 50.5 cm), framed text: 30 1/8 x 19 7/8 in. (76.5 x 50.5 cm). © 2026 Sophie Calle / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris. Courtesy of Sophie Calle and Paula Cooper Gallery, New York.