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ED BEERBOHM'S STORY

Updated: Nov 22, 2025


“Fairly late on in my life, I was afflicted with a neurological condition which slowly but surely eroded my ability to move about. Walking - previously an automatic function that I didn’t really think about - became perplexing, exhausting and painful. And so with disability and immobility I became increasingly confined to my flat and increasingly isolated.


Art also came to me late in life and it has proved to be a means by which I can escape the tyranny of isolation. Disability reconfigures space: For me, walls, doors and stairs have become more barrier-like, more excluding and distances have stretched out while the fabric of everyday life and my navigation of it has become more complex and challenging. But painting and film-making have helped me adapt to this spatial reconfiguration, providing a means of escape more literal than a flight of fancy. My flat - my home - has itself become a canvas. By painting the walls, I can transform them from barriers to the outside world into alternative vistas. In film my bathroom can become, rather than a site of mundane ablutions, instead a place where fish might chat to one another.


It’s a continual process - there’s no fixed goal. Instead, by continually altering the interior of my home, I find myself negotiating and renegotiating my relationship with space. It’s not a solution or panacea, but the dominant language in which I search for one.”


Find me on

Instagram and YouTube


Here is a selection of my videos.


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