I explore walking as a way of reclaiming urban space, shaping memory, and questioning belonging. My practice blends artistic, sociological, and legal perspectives, using the act of walking to engage with history, city development, and personal identity. My recent project, "a walk during which the participants will tread their own route and take a few stops designed in such a way that the artist can share her fascination with art history, history of walking, city development, psychology, and other fields", invites participants to navigate their own paths through a city while encountering moments of guided reflection. Through collaborative leadership, memory-making, and embodied experience, the walk becomes a tool for investigating how cities shape us and how we, in turn, shape them. Walking is both a method of artistic research and an act of resistance—an assertion of presence in the urban landscape.