Immersive & Interactive Experiences

Tracking is not only something that can be explained.
It is first something that must be experienced.

Through experimental audiovisual approaches — such as 360° video, subjective camera perspectives or interactive narratives inspired by web documentaries — these works invite viewers to accompany the tracker in the field. Rather than observing the practice from the outside, the audience is placed within the movement itself.

Following a tracker in real time also reveals something simple but often overlooked: every tracker is a body (what we all are). A body walking, kneeling, pausing, adjusting its posture, sensing the terrain. The interpretation of traces is inseparable from the physical engagement of the person who reads them. Comparing the movements and gestures of different trackers therefore makes visible the physicality of the practice. These immersive formats allow audiences to perceive this diversity directly, experiencing tracking as a lived, embodied practice.