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2006

Walking to Save Some Sea – My 46000 Challenge

Cast Away, installation of found plastics at Landguard Fort in Felixstowe, approximately 4m diameter.
Thorpeness Beach, Leiston, UK

Sub-collection

Activism or Protest

Sub-collection · 54 items
Sub-collection

Environmentalism

Sub-collection · 25 items

installation

Collection · 42 items

The Everyday

Collection · 48 items

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Walking piece

Missa

MISSA presents 100 pairs of army boots suspended within a sparse grid. The work creates an unsettling silence, inviting viewers to reflect on war’s invisible consequences, the tension between absence and presence, and the quiet mechanisms of obedience and loss.

Dominique Blain
Walking piece

Ashiato (Footprints)

Footprints by Akira Kanayama is a walkable artwork of stenciled shoe prints on vinyl. Spectators walk on or alongside it, creating a “double walker” effect that links bodies, traces, and space, blending physical movement with imaginative engagement.

Akira Kanayama
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Check It Out

An industrial handcart with VCRs, lights, a clock, and TV monitors depicts walking as a ritualized, gear-laden activity, showing urban commuters wheeling carts, carrying suitcases, and hauling briefcases amid the city’s daily hustle.

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SEARCH

SEARCH (Newcastle 1993; Adelaide 1996) by Pat Naldi and Wendy Kirkup used city CCTV systems to record synchronised walks to separate locations. Short sequences were broadcast on TV, exploring surveillance, urban space, and embodied movement.

Pat Naldi Wendy Kirkup
Sub-collection

Activism or Protest

Sub-collection · 54 items
Sub-collection

Environmentalism

Sub-collection · 25 items

installation

Collection · 42 items

The Everyday

Collection · 48 items

Related

Walking piece

Missa

MISSA presents 100 pairs of army boots suspended within a sparse grid. The work creates an unsettling silence, inviting viewers to reflect on war’s invisible consequences, the tension between absence and presence, and the quiet mechanisms of obedience and loss.

Dominique Blain
Walking piece

Ashiato (Footprints)

Footprints by Akira Kanayama is a walkable artwork of stenciled shoe prints on vinyl. Spectators walk on or alongside it, creating a “double walker” effect that links bodies, traces, and space, blending physical movement with imaginative engagement.

Akira Kanayama
Walking piece

Check It Out

An industrial handcart with VCRs, lights, a clock, and TV monitors depicts walking as a ritualized, gear-laden activity, showing urban commuters wheeling carts, carrying suitcases, and hauling briefcases amid the city’s daily hustle.

Matthew McCaslin
Walking piece

SEARCH

SEARCH (Newcastle 1993; Adelaide 1996) by Pat Naldi and Wendy Kirkup used city CCTV systems to record synchronised walks to separate locations. Short sequences were broadcast on TV, exploring surveillance, urban space, and embodied movement.

Pat Naldi Wendy Kirkup
Walking piece
Walking to Save Some Sea documents Fran Crowe’s year-long response to ocean plastic pollution. Between 2006–07 she walked 200km of coastline, collecting 46,000 pieces of litter - one square mile’s worth—turning personal action into a call for collective responsibility.

According to Fran Crowe: “I have always loved walking by the sea and was increasingly disturbed by the amount of plastic I was finding washed up on the beach. But in 2006, the United Nations Environment Programme reported that humankind’s exploitation of the oceans was ‘rapidly passing the point of no return’ and I was really shocked to discover that they estimated that on average there were around 46,000 pieces of plastic litter floating on every square mile of ocean, leading to the death of over one million seabirds and over 100,000 marine mammals every year due to entanglement with or swallowing of litter.

We now know that over 12 million tonnes of plastic end up in our oceans every year, travelling on ocean currents to every part of the globe. These plastics endure in the marine environment indefinitely: items from the birth of plastics are washing up on our shores, virtually unscathed. Scientists estimate that plastic can take 1000 years or more to degrade in seawater and even then will continue to pollute our environment with thousands of microscopic fibres: samples taken from a Northumbrian beach were found to have over 10,000 fibres in just one litre of sand… But disposal of plastics in our oceans isn’t just harming wildlife now. We are also providing a toxic legacy that may last an eternity. Moreover, plastics can be found throughout the food chain, even ending up in the food on our plates.
plastics, like diamonds, are forever…

The Challenge:

I was so shocked by what I had learned, I felt I had to do something and resolved to ‘save’ one square mile of ocean by collecting 46000 pieces of litter whilst walking on the beaches near my home. Every time I visited the beach I picked up all the litter I could carry. My challenge took exactly a year to achieve (September 2006 – September 2007) and in total I walked over 200kms and carried away nearly a third of a tonne of rubbish.

But sadly my challenge will never really be complete. Scientists estimate that the amount of plastic in the sea is increasing at a rapid rate, doubling every 2 or 3 years. I’m still collecting (I can’t stop!). But this could be a lifetime’s work and I still might not save a single square mile of sea…

My efforts may only be a literal splash in the ocean compared to the immensity of the problems are seas are facing. But what if everyone tried to do something about it? Luckily there is a lot more we can do – have a look here at the things we can all do…”

_
As found in the Fly in the Face website.

APA style reference

Crowe, F. (2006). Walking to Save Some Sea – My 46000 Challenge. walk · listen · create. https://walklistencreate.org/walkingpiece/walking-to-save-some-sea-my-46000-challenge/
Submitted by: Dani Spadotto

earl-footed, hurdle-footed, club-footed

As in “He’s got feet like an earl-footed turnip” (said of someone who walks with his feet turned out). from the Dictionary of Newfoundland English (University of Toronto Press, 1982).

Added by Marlene Creates
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