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2010

Plantón Móvil

Platón Móvil: Centro historico de Lima, 2010
Lima, Peru

Sub-collection

Activism or Protest

Sub-collection · 54 items

Education or pedagogy

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Forest Plantation

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Sub-collection

Activism or Protest

Sub-collection · 54 items

Education or pedagogy

Collection · 8 items
Sub-collection

Forest Plantation

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land art

Collection · 24 items

Related

Walking piece

The Journey of Nishiyuu

In 2013, six Cree youth from Whapmagoostui walked 1,600 km to Ottawa as part of the Idle No More movement to support Chief Theresa Spence and Indigenous rights. Joined by others along the way, they were celebrated as symbols of Indigenous resilience and unity.

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The Dakota Commemorative Walk honors 1,700 Dakota women, children, and elders forcibly marched to Fort Snelling in 1862. Led by Lower Sioux women, the spiritual walk retraces this route through ceremony, prayer, and collective remembrance.

Dakota Community
Walking piece

Watershed Line

In 2019–2021, Kate Green walked the Watershed Line of the Elan and Claerwen rivers in Mid-Wales, photographing each concrete post along the 72 sq. mile catchment that supplies Birmingham’s water, creating songs and works inspired by the landscape and aqueduct.

Kate Green
walkingevent

Politics of Walking: Grief, Solidarity, and Resistance

The recent protests in Serbia and Greece in part started as the expression of collected grief over, oddly for both, railway disasters. The resulting marches not only represented deep discontent with the actions of the respective governments, they were also expressions of solidarity and resistance.

Nohad ElHajj Marta Moreno Muñoz +4
Walking piece
Plantón Móvil is a yearly participatory “walking forest” performance that creates new green spaces. Blending the meanings of “sapling” and “sit-in,” it imagines plants marching through the city to demand respect, inspired by Lima’s mistreated urban trees.

Plantón Móvil is a participatory walking forest performance that occurs annually and leads to the creation of public green areas.

“Plantón” is the word in Spanish for a sapling, a young tree that is ready to be planted into the ground. It is also the word for a sit-in. This project takes on both: the green to be planted and the peaceful protest. It is about giving plants and trees the opportunity to “walk” down the streets of a city that is also theirs.

Plantón Móvil started in 2010 while I was walking around Lima, my hometown, and noticing how many trees and plants had their leaves blackened with smog, were being treated as trash cans, or even used as bathrooms. I started to put myself in their place, and thought I would have left town a long time ago. Instead they are sort of forced to sit there and accept this abuse because of their planted “immobile” state. I wondered what it would be like to encounter a walking forest that had taken to the streets like any other group of people would do, demanding respect.

Plantón Móvil, however, is not a group of people carrying plants: at least for that time being we are the forest. I find it important to make this distinction because it changes the nature of the gesture. This is about lending our mobility to plants so that they can benefit from the speed and scale that draws people’s attention. In return; we may momentarily borrow some of their slowness. Essentially, it is about moving-with as a form of solidarity.

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Information available on Lucia Monge’s website.

APA style reference

Monge, L. (2010). Plantón Móvil. walk · listen · create. https://walklistencreate.org/walkingpiece/planton-movil/
Submitted by: Dani Spadotto

walkshop

A workshop with walking at its focus.

Added by James Cunningham
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