Nick Murray: Return to Dreamphone, a solo exhibition
Image via Barham Park Studios artist-in-residence, Nick Murray

ACAVA artist-in-residence Nick Murray presents Return to Dreamphone, a solo exhibition exploring collective memory, digital cultures, and speculative archiving.

Rooted in their ongoing project mapping the shifting landscape along the River Brent, the exhibition invites audiences to consider how community archives can function as acts of care and resistance. Through installation, storytelling, and interactive elements, Murray asks: how do we document shared knowledge in ways that remain meaningful and accessible?

“There’s a place we’re all trying to reach. Just outside of the current internet, or just beyond the horizon. There’s a church spire – or is it a radio tower? – marking the way against the sky. Each story we tell, each map we make, each meal shared, gets us a step closer. Every experience shared defines the route just a little more. ” – Nick Murray

Expanding on their audio narrative piece Dial 55555 (née Dreamphone), this new work explores collective action through speculative fiction. Rooted in systems of care and collective reimagining, Return to Dreamphone asks inhabitants what a community archive can offer. A room-sized installation and a card table, shaped like Barham Park’s nearest floodplain, explore alternative communal archiving methods—questioning how they can resist and thrive in an increasingly commodified digital-physical world.   

The works at ACAVA’s Barham Park Studios are an in-progress document of Nick’s ongoing project mapping the shifting landscape along the River Brent. This chapter follows the Wembley Brook as it passes underneath Barham Park and meets the Brent at Stonebridge Park. The river becomes an allegorical path— it meanders, obscuring the search for a utopia that can be glimpsed, but remains just out of reach. 

With the river at its heart, Return to Dreamphone invites audiences to hold both the potential of collective action and also the care needed for archiving in each hand. These forces exist as equal velocities, pushing in opposite directions from the present.  

 

Exhibition details

When: 26–30 March 2025, 11am–5pm
Where: Barham Park Studios, 660 Harrow Road, Wembley HA0 2HB

Unconference event: 29 March, 11am–4pm

As part of the exhibition, Murray hosts an Unconference, an open-format gathering that fosters discussion, collaboration, and contributions to the evolving archive. Free, book your free place here.

Exhibition details

Free / All welcome

When: 26–30 March 2025, 11am–5pm

Where: Barham Park Studios, 660 Harrow Road, Wembley HA0 2HB

Unconference event: 29 March, 11am–4pm. Free, book your free place here.

Image via Barham Park Studios artist-in-residence, Nick Murray

At the exhibition’s core—though hidden from view—is an archive artifact; a digital repository, separate from the internet, preserving knowledge from workshops and discussions held during Nick’s residency. 

The archive relies on communal responsibility and asks for immediate care. Anyone can access it, add to it, and take from it. Each participant becomes the caretaker and custodian of a growing archive and living manifesto, within this library of communal utopian dreaming. By gifting knowledge and experience, the archive explores how the power of collective imagination can impact the politics of public space— welcoming past failures, dismantling structures and migrating between utopic borders. 

How might a community-held server exist within Barham Park? A filing cabinet, a bird box, or a park bench? Perhaps a depository for the found stones or fallen leaves – what and who would it hold space for? How could it speak to the values of the park’s constituents? Would the server actually serve? Who would contribute to it and how long would its legacy last?

Where to find us

About Nick Murray

Nick Murray is a game-maker, composer and artist making interactive narrative work focusing on loss and digital cultures. They aim to respond to hyperlocal contexts through poetics, game-making and workshops. Nick’s approach seeks to evoke feelings of community, belonging and empathy in our spaces as we look towards a more collective future.  Nick has been the ACAVA artist-in-residence at ACAVA Barham Park Studios from September 2024-March 2025.

www.nickmurray.horse / @cassettewitch 

Image via Barham Park Studios artist-in-residence, Nick Murray