Walking art refers to a variety of artistic practices that position walking as the central process, experience or outcome.[1][2][3][4] Walking artists have diverse interests and it 'has gathered practitioners from nearly every field'.[5]:43 Despite emerging from a variety of artistic and literary traditions, a 'common feature [of walking art] is the engagement of the body in a process of walking through a landscape based on a specific artistic design.'[4]:161 Some artists consider walking an artistic end in itself, while others use walking as a means of mark-making, storytelling, social practice, or to create work in other artistic media.[6][7][8]
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^Walk ways. Stuart Horodner, Stephen Robert Frankel, Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, Western Gallery, Dalhousie Art Gallery, Oakville Galleries. New York. 2002. p. 39. ISBN0-916365-65-4. OCLC51030203.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)