Let us keep together not wide apart = Waiho i te toipoto Kaua i te toiroa: The space between us. A conversation on ambulatory research
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Wood, Becca
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2021-12
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Conference Contribution - Oral Presentation
Ngā Upoko Tukutuku (Māori subject headings)
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Auckland (N.Z.)
New Zealand
walking as art
pedestrian experience
spaces
sense of place
public art
New Zealand
walking as art
pedestrian experience
spaces
sense of place
public art
ANZSRC Field of Research Code (2020)
Citation
Ferguson, Wood, B. (2021, December). Let us keep together not wide apart – the space between us: a panel presentation on ambulatory research. Paper presented at the MIT/Unitec Research Symposium 2021 - Rangahau Horonuku Hou - New Research Landscapes
Abstract
Walking in its symbolic form could be considered as humans first aesthetic act, initiating order in chaos or the void (te kore) and transformational of the spaces traversed.
Eventually these early human journeys became rituals, processions, sacred paths, pilgrimages and narratives, taking on a functionality or purpose separate from what we consider arts practice today
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