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    The Poly Listening Club

    The Poly Listening Club, June 4, Photo: Richard Blasko
    The Poly Listening Club, June 4, Photo: Richard Blasko

    A close listening event series, Spring 2024

    Organized by Barbara Preisig and friends

    As artists and scholars, we are well trained in perceiving the world visually. But what do we know about the ways in which listening shapes research? What role does hearing play in the field, in the museum and in the studio? Where does hearing end and listening start? What somatic part is involved in the act of listening? How can what is heard be shared and translated? Is it possible to hear what remains invisible? Is there always hearing where sound is? What escapes the ear?

    For some time now, the topic of listening and sound has been attracting quite a lot of attention in the art world as well as in the humanities and social sciences. Rather than simply celebrating this recently proclaimed “auditory turn,” the Poly Listening Club intends to reflect both critically and sensually on listening as a multifaceted research mode. To each event one or more guest(s) will bring a sound piece that turns listening itself into a subject, inviting listeners to reflect on how social, political, and environmental aspects of the sonic present can be heard. The collective listening sessions will be accompanied by responses of invited echoers.

    The Poly Listening Club is a space for mindful encounters, for responding and amplifying, for experimenting with different modes of hearing, discussing and doubting, a place where sound might resonate with the audience in multiple ways, challenging the binarism of active and passive, sender and receiver, opening up possibilities for speculation, polyphony, maybe.

    March 26

    TONALIZATION AND THE STATE OF BEING A BEGINNER

    Cally Spooner, «DEAD TIME (Melody’s Warm Up)», 2022
    Echo: Laura von Niederhäusern

    A listening exercise on foregrounding that which is typically left, or edited, out. The music is familiar yet anti-narrative and episodic: a cellist is playing tonalization exercises starting from the prelude of Bach’s Cello Suite No.1 in G mayor, inspired by the natural expression of the human voice, performed by musicians to find their «tone» through scales or improvised repertoire. A brief, intermittent digital «beep» clicks at regular intervals, an irritant yet also an element that holds together the composition. The ending is eliminated, the beginning returns. «DEAD TIME (Melody’s Warm Up)» is a listening exercise in which the preparation rather than the performance, becomes the main event.

    April 18

    MY BODY IS YOUR VOICE IS MY SELF IS OUR PLEASURE  

    Ronja Svaneborg, «Do I need to move my lips to be part of the choir?», 2024  
    Echo: choir  

    When sharing a space with voicing bodies, moments of ephemeral transformation occur that can shift perceptions of our place in the world. Frisson, aesthetic chills, attunement, psychogenic shivers, social frequencies, skin orgasm, sweet spots.   

    Is listening a lonely practice, or does it blur the distinction between individuals and their surroundings, offering an opportunity for momentarily escaping the self or getting a self back? 

    Can senses of belonging be orchestrated? Is the composer a collective body? 

    Do I need to move my lips to be part of the choir?  

    Can my goosebumps sing?   

    May 7

    EAR ON EARTH. THE SOUND OF CLIMATE CHANGE

    Eleni-Ira Panourgia, «Water-drought patterns», 2023
    Echo: Kris Decker

    What’s the sound of environmental change? «Water-drought patterns» tells the story of an aquatic environment suffering drought. Transitions between current and future conditions in landscapes and ecosystems are explored through the fictional dimensions of sounds of organisms, elements, and states of matter. The sound work delves into the microcosm of environmental sounds to construct more complex textures revealing plant and animal reactions to drought as they adapt, struggle, or behave differently. Such effects are experienced from the perspective of non-human bodies navigating change across temporal and spatial scales. Listeners are invited to experiment with different ways of listening and to imagine their own versions of climate-changed acoustic environments. 

    June 4

    NON-EXTRACTIVIST LISTENING – FOUR OFFERINGS
    Cannach MacBride, Hong-Kai Wang, AM Kanngieser, Aio Frei

    Are there generous, permeable, decelerated listening attentions that can soften or attack the categorization and difference perpetuated by capitalist, colonial, white-supremacist, hetero-patriarchal, ableist relations?
    Listening positionalities and perceptions are informed by identities, experiences, beliefs, and their intersections. Non-extractivist listening asks us to notice our noticing and work from there. As AM Kanngieser writes: «Listening attention might mean to embrace the impossibility of receiving truth,» and therefore «embrace listening as being present with whatever comes.» Cannach MacBride, Hong-Kai Wang, AM Kanngieser and Aio Frei invite you to attune to a shared, attentive listen­ing session involving four offerings and a preparatory exercise.