Working alongside the World Trails Network (WTN), a community of trail management and tourism providers, that include many traditional pilgrimage routes and trails that now accommodate secular pilgrims, we are running a series of online events to discuss the roles walking art plays in pilgrimage and vice versa.
This second event in the series focusses on Contemporary pilgrimage, walking art, climate and activism and we are delighted to welcome Roxana Perez-Mendez of Campo Research Studio, Jonathan Baxter and Jolie Booth of Krya Arts and Pilgrimage for Nature.
Chaired by Lora Aziz, co-chair of the WTN Arts & Culture Task Force and Babak Fakhamzadeh of walk · listen · create, we bring you panels of thought leaders, trail professionals and walking artists to discuss When does a walk become a pilgrimage?
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Sacred Steps
Contemporary pilgrimage, walking art, climate and activism Modern day pilgrimage is growing in popularity – every year numbers grow along some of the oldest and most traditional pilgrimage routes. Pilgrimage has been practised for millennia and is shared by all the world’s major religions, on every continent – there isn’t a day when a pilgrimage
On Pilgrimage: what we have learned so far
In association with the Arts & Culture Task Force of the World Trails Network, we are running a six month series of monthly online meetings with academic researchers, thought leaders, trail professionals and walking artists to investigate pilgrimage today. Beginning in March, and to run on the first Tuesday of subsequent months, the first session
Art on the Pilgrim Path
Artists working along routes and in landscapes Art has been entwined with pilgrimage from the outset, in iconography and relics, object attribution and travel souvenirs, music and folklore, and more recently in walking performances. Does a pilgrimage route become an open-air studio exhibiting the pilgrim experience? Presenters included: Professor Kathryn Barush author of Imaging Pilgrimage: Art as Embodied
On Pilgrimage 1 – Pilgrimage Today
Working alongside the World Trails Network (WTN), a community of trail management and tourism providers, that include many traditional pilgrimage routes and trails that now accommodate secular pilgrims, we are running a series of online events to discuss the roles walking art plays in pilgrimage and vice versa. Our guests on this opening event include Professor Kathryn Barush author
Powers of Pilgrimage: Religion in a World of Movement
While pilgrimage often focuses on sacred shrines, it can also occur in apparently mundane places. Indeed, not everyone has the resources or mobility to take part in religiously inspired movement to foreign lands, and some find meaning in religious movement closer to home and outside of officially sanctioned practices. This book argues that we must question
Walking Arts & Health: Episode 1 – Walking Arts & Mental Health
Through our new WALCAfé series, WALC invites you to explore how Walking Arts plays a vital role in well-being, both individually and collectively, physically and mentally. Our first conversation will focus on Walking Arts and Mental Health. We are delighted to have with us four speakers who bring diverse insights from research, therapeutic practice, community

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