My walking practice operates at the intersection of artistic research, landscape, and climate imagination. My walks are a method of inquiry: a way of producing situated, embodied knowledge through sustained movement, attention, and encounter.
Through long-distance, site-specific walks — most notably along the Dutch Zero NAP line , an imaginary coastline at sea level — I explore how landscapes shaped by human intervention carry cultural memory, future projections, and ethical tension. My walks combine performative action, storytelling and speculative dialogue, often in collaboration with NedeR, an AI walking companion designed to represent the landscape as a reflective presence.
Walking becomes a relational practice in which body, place, time, human imagination, and artificial intelligence co-produce knowledge.
Through long-distance, site-specific walks—most notably along the Dutch Zero NAP line (the imaginary coastline at sea level)—I explore how landscapes shaped by human intervention carry cultural memory, future projections, and ethical tension. My walks combine performative action, conversation, listening, storytelling, and speculative dialogue, sometimes in collaboration with an AI walking companion that represents the landscape itself.
Walking becomes a relational practice in which body, place, time, and imagination co-produce knowledge.