Walking is one of the most fundamental forms of human movement, which goes beyond its practical, everyday function and can also be interpreted as a cultural-historical phenomenon, a means of cognition, an act of art, and a philosophical method. In the 1970s, Lucius Burckhardt developed the cultural science and aesthetic method of promenadology (also known as strollology or the science of walking), which aims to make people aware of and expand the conditions of environmental perception.
The exhibition examines walking as an art form, a narrative tool, and a critical practice through works, projects, and actions that use the everyday activity of walking as a means of discovery, exploration, resistance, and political action.
Curators: József Készman, Zsófia Máté