A central question within our shared practice is its dissemination and documentation. Meeting regularly and irregularly online each of us brings a distinct focus—an individual intention that feeds into our individual research and this shared exploration. Through daily walking, we cultivate a sense of place and connection, an embodied experience of moving through the world. Though our walks differ in purpose and rhythm, in how we mark time and distance, we are all still moving.
Jo (Hostafrancs, Catalunya) walks in time—an exploration of duration. Walking her grief, her loss.
Anna (Buckinghamshire) is drawn to the way we walk in different directions—how we navigate terrain and embody it. What are our points of departure, our arrivals? How do our landscapes shape us, and how do we shape them? What traces do we leave beh
Sarah (Montreal, Canada) seeks to uncover the relationship between walking and thinking—the movement of thought, the fluidity of ideas as they shift between past and present. How does walking create space for new thoughts to emerge?