Al's XPUB2 proposal draft: Difference between revisions

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''// [https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/User:%C3%85lnik back to Ål's main page]'' <br>
''// [https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Graduate_Seminar_2022-2023 back to Graduate Seminar]''<br>
''// see [[Al's XPUB2 thesis outline]]''<br>


= <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #cc00cc; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Questions </span> =
= <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #cc00cc; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Questions </span> =
# What do you want to make? <br>
_What do you want to make?  
# How do you plan to make it? <br>
_How do you plan to make it?
# What is your timetable? [stages] [deadlines] <br>
_What is your timetable?
# Why do you want to make it? <br>
_Why do you want to make it?  
# Who can help you and how? <br>
_Who can help you and how?  
# Relation to previous practice <br>
_Relation to previous practice  
# Relation to a larger context <br>
_Relation to a larger context  
# References/bibliography
_Who is the work for (part of why do you want to make it)
# ''Who is the work for (part of why do you want to make it)'' <br>
_References/bibliography
== <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> What do you want to make? </span> ==
== <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> What do you want to make? </span> ==


'''[collaborative research]''' this project is being done [partially] in collaboration with Mitsa. Together, we aim at researching and working on sound as a format for our project/s. <br>
[[File:Xpub2-project-pub-idea.jpg|thumb|"sound jams" is a modular non-linear handbook with tools to facilitate listen-and-respond jams & publish their outputs]]


'''[for the final graduation moment]''' i would like to make a sound performance and/or sound installation using the [https://pad.xpub.nl/p/alnik-xpub2-research-audiozines audiozines], created during our research during the whole year [could make a rhythm of making one zine per month, e.g.]. Those zines would be also documented in printed zine versions [the two formats can also go together - transmedia storytelling - like some part of the content is only on the printed zine; some - on the audio]. <br>
A '''handbook''' presenting a '''method''' to produce and publish collective sound-based publications. This hands-on guide will explore an applied method of deep listening sound jams by inviting people to participate in a collective sound-making and publishing process. By ''sound jams'', I understand any facilitated process of sound-making and publishing that includes more than one person. The reader - an artist, educator or even a collective - will hold in their hands a collection of practical instructions on how to do the activities themselves, similar to ''Nature Study Notes: Improvisation Rites'' by the Scratch Orchestra.


'''I am struggling with finding my research question.'''
'''The project''' focuses on bringing deeper attention to sound in the ways we perceive it, and the ways we respond with it. In the project, I will explore various ways to facilitate sound-making and publishing moments on the basis of ''listening and responding''. The method is based on the concept of ''deep listening'', originally developed by musician and educator Pauline Oliveros. In her practice, Oliveros investigated new ways to focus attention on music including her concept of deep listening - “a practice that is intended to heighten and expand consciousness of sound in as many dimensions of awareness and attentional dynamics as humanly possible”.


<br>
[[File:Sound-jams-zine.jpg|thumb|a prototype of sound jam documentation]]


What could it be about? I have many ideas, some of them are: <br>
'''The sound jams''', being various ways of collective sound-making and publishing without the restriction of time, space, instruments or format, will be implemented in collaboration with my classmate Mitsa Chaida. Our researches will meet in the moments of experiments with other participants in order to try out different methods and tools.  
* methods to create audiozines?
* methods to create collective audiozines?
* parallel diaries - ways to connect each other by recording something in the same moment
* sounds from the public spaces (to what sounds, noises are we exposed) - like at 1:30 AM roadworks next to my room [collect field recordings + add my personal emotions to those moments with music/abstract sounds + add keywords/illustration]
* recording the sounds of the body (hugging...)


Interested in facilitating jams. Research pad about that is [https://pad.xpub.nl/p/alnik-xpub2-jams here].
''Here is a [https://hub.xpub.nl/soupboat/~alnik/xpub2/jam-recordings/2022-10-10-MMs/sound-jam-zine.pdf prototype of documenting a sound jam], done at PZI on 10-10-2022''


<br>
'''Sound''' is my choice for the core medium of this project because even though we are surrounded by it on a daily basis, it still feels quite inaccessible for many educators, facilitators, artists and artivists. Often associated with music, it is a reserved territory for people with musical training and for sound artists. In reality, it is far more accessible and there are many ways sound-making can be open for participants from any kind of background. Thus, this handbook aims at bringing another medium (or opening more possibilities for exploration of it) to artists, educators, publishers and collectives.
'''[notes from interviews]'''


''-one audio part - a sound pub - can be placed in many ways <br>
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Why do you want to make it? </span>==
-''physical zine'' <br>
-''process of scheduled zine creation (they become a collection to use for performing and make a documentation of)'' <br>
-''improvised creations - sketches in sound'' <br>
-''the ideas: very meta; what are the actual contents of the zines? they can be records of specific moments - what is the criteria, how do you choose these moments and with whom'' <br>
-''it is about the structure and not about the topic'' <br>
-''put a deadline for topic exploration - until when it's ok to not know it :D'' <br>


== <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Why do you want to make it? </span> ==
Facilitation is a substantial element of my artistic practice. Since 2016, I am experimenting with various ways of creating time and space for people to try out new artistic tools, no matter their previous experiences and training. Visual arts and digital communication were mainly the focus of the tools I was researching, but as a mixed-media artist, I am interested in bringing more sound as a format to these laboratories. During the first academic year of my studies at Experimental Publishing, I already noticed my increased interest in using more sound in my artistic practice. Highlights of my research and experiments were the pieces made for Special Issue 18: Radio Implicancies; the care-taking process of facilitating and the editorial work for some weekly releases; as well as participation in improvisational jams with the other XPUB students. I also facilitated my [https://www.nomadways.org/en/projects/music-moves-youth-2022 first sound-based artistic residency in September 2022], which allowed me to bring a new medium to my facilitation practice, a medium that worked well in a group of people, and that was a completely new form of expression to many of the participants in the workshop.


Last year I loved the format of weekly releases - doing small experiments and reflecting on some topics/ideas with sound (and sometimes an image). I imagine that the experiments can then build up a bigger topic and research question.
This project is also born out of the frustration of feeling oftentimes excluded from jamming sessions because of not being a ''musician'' (not having musical training). The element of collective making is also an important entry point for me. I am interested in exploring opportunities for collaborative creative work. I aim at bringing and establishing some principles in my art and facilitation practice: openness, inclusivity, improvisation and collectiveness. I want to create a safe space for experiments, where everyone is welcome, no matter their previous experiences and training.
<br>
I am looking for a research question that can include collecting data through sound.
<br>


'''[notes from the interview]'''
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> How do you plan to make it? </span>==
''-the places where we do them will bring context'' <br>
''-find a pattern'' <br>
''-what is for myself the relevance of this research question? why is it important?'' <br>


== <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> How do you plan to make it? </span> ==
[[File:Jam-clock.jpg|thumb|the score of the jam session - following the structure of the clock]]


I would like to try out the following: <br>
'''[research of methods for collective sound-making]''' I would like to start with a research of collective-sound making methods that are already published by other artists. Also, I will look for examples and inspirations of sound publications. Which of the sound publications I find interesting are done by a collective, a group of people. What is their process?
_1 - collect and map methods to collect sound; also ways to edit it and looking for the reasons behind both choices of method; <br>
_2 - starting doing small experiments with different ways to create sound (computer-base and analog, by jams, by field recording) - I feel like I need to try some of them out first (''explain what is electronic and what analog''); <br>
_3 - creating small experiments with a particular ask/question/intention behind - in search of the research topic maybe? <br>
_4 - recording sound, mixing it due to some concept and then creating small zines to see how it's going to look like <br>
_5 - idea to create an instrument (maybe facilitating sessions when others play with this instrument with an assignment to create something specific) <br>
_6 - idea of using Room for sound - invite residents to participate - diffractive mixing of their contributions <br>


'''[notes from the interview]''' <br>
'''[sound jam experiments]''' Simultaneously, I would like to test experiments of collective sound-making and publishing. Since I already have facilitated a few moments, I would like to reflect on them and create prototypes for publishing them - as a tool, part of the handbook; and as a sound publication, an example.
>> ''the final performance can be a diffractive listening to the different publications - thus, creating a new one (question: why? what will that bring?)'' <br>
_''I really have the audiozine format - speaks about the velocity and easiness to collect and distribute them - easy to distribute;'' <br>
_''what are the characteristics of the zine to experiment in the context of these ideas - e.g. common characteristics of the zine that can frame the experiment'' <br>


== <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> What is your timetable? </span> ==
'''[instruments]''' Whatever instruments you give to the participants in jam, shapes the whole experience. Thus, experimenting with giving various types of tools to make sound with, is another layer in the research to be taken into consideration, even though it is not the focus of the project.


==== october - ways to collect and edit sound + documenting ====
'''[research publishing tools]''' Researching tools for publishing, in connection with collective publishing practices. What are the ways to share sound-based creations? Which one of them can be or already are collaborative?
1_ reflect on the mixing we did - to unpack what we did // with Mitsa <br>
2_ schedule jams and collecting sounds moments // with Mitsa <br>
3_ filed recording experiments // 10-14 oct <br>
4_ public moment in leszaal - ??? what to do // (idea of sound installation or recording people doing stuff) <br>


'''outcomes:''' <br>
'''[put things together]''' Describing the tools for collective sound-based publications making - how can we make sounds together; what are the ways to listen better, to respond with sound, to publish our sound works, to do it collectively?
_documentation and raw-raw draft of proposal <br>
_field recordings <br>
_sounds created <br>
_experiments with edited sound <br>
_pure data experiments <br>
<br>


==== november - ways to collect and edit sound + proposal draft ====
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> What is your timetable? </span>==
1_ get inspiration // 25 nov Arooj Aftab, Lucrecia Dalt live <br>
2_ prototype of audiozine + print zine - test the combo - put all experiments together <br>
3_ edit music and sound + document methods <br>
4_ explore topics: what makes all the experiments so far come together? <br>
5_ thesis outline - what form will it take (a report of the research and practice?) <br>


'''outcomes:''' <br>
_1 // october-january // research of existing methods for collective sound-making and publishing<br>
_proposal ready // 18 nov <br>
_2 // october-january // drafting, shaping, testing tools for collective sound-making and publishing<br>
_thesis outline (form) // 18 nov <br>
_3 // october-may // facilitating and documenting sound jams & creating prototyping publication modules out of them (already facilitated two sound jams - [https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Sound_jams_research#01_M&Ms_@_PZI M&Ms at PZI]; and a [https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Sound_jams_research#02_What_do_books_say?_@_Leeszaal public one at Leeszaal])<br>
_prototype of audiozine  <br>
_4 // march-april // revision, reflection, revisiting instructions, feedback <br>
_topics drafting start <br>
_5 // april-may // prototyping the publication (with printable and digital elements)<br>
_6 // april-may // deciding on what and how to present it at the grad show<br>
_7 // may-june // making the publication<br>
_8 // june-july // presenting the publication (grad show)<br>


== <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Who can help you and how? </span> ==
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Who can help you and how? </span>==


'''[space]''' would like to try out different spaces and locations in rotterdam; also inviting different people and orchestrating jams with various publics [when that is possible] <br>
For facilitating the sound jams, I will need the help of my friend and classmate ''Mitsa''. Together, we already have been part of several workshops and sessions of sound-making exploration. We see our [https://pzwiki.wdka.nl/mediadesign/Sound_jams_research sound jams] as a space for trying out our tools and reflecting on the way they are perceived by the participants. They are a way to do experiments and get immediate feedback about our facilitation tools, or the instruments we are testing.
* make a list with spaces that we are interested in making jams in;
* what are the characteristics of these places and how to use them in relation to our jam?


'''[publics]''' define different publics and test with them; who is also doing something similar in the area?
For having participants in the jams and giving feedback, I would need the help of our XPUB2 group - to join our jam sessions. For the more open jams, would need to help in organising the event and getting materials (instruments, snacks, drinks). I plan to organise jams with PZI Archipelago in school, can contact Research station, too. For more public jams, will check with contacts outside school, such as ''Tisa'' (WORM, Re#sister), ''Manetta and Cristina'' (Varia), ''Leslie'' (for contact with local spaces) etc.


== <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Relation to previous practice </span> ==
For finding space for the sound jams, I will need help to find locations and venues. Thus, I would need the help of our local connections in Rotterdam. For this, I would need help for getting in touch and finding appropriate spaces.
== <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Relation to a larger context </span> ==
 
== <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> References/bibliography </span> ==
For prototyping and creating the publication, I will need help with laying it out, printing and assembling the way I imagine (because I have no prior experience in creating such a publication). I believe my friends and colleagues ''Jian and Gersande'' can help me with it.
== <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Who is the work for? </span> ==
 
For material base, I will need some instruments for sound-making, recorders, speakers. XPUB tutors can help with some equipment, for more - can make calls and ask local contacts, too. WDKA rental has some limited equipment, should explore also other options. Have to check what budgets do we have for making our master projects.
 
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Relation to previous practice </span>==
 
'''[facilitation]''' Since 2016, I am part of Nomadways collective - an association based in France that designs and implements artistic experimental workshops for artists, activists, and educators - artivists. As a project designer and facilitator, I have experimented with various mediums that we often mix with topic. In our traditionally 2-week workshops, we create space for people to try out new tools and look for ways to implement them in their practice. Adding a whole new library of tools to my facilitation practice is a quite relevant endevour, but sharing it freely with the public is exactly what I am interested in terms of expanding and developing my work.
 
'''[sound-based experiments]''' My complicated relation to music and sound started in my early years of childhood when I was attracted to music but discouraged by my parents to pursue any musical training (they were calling me and my sisters “musical invalids”). Thus, I became a listener. Listening to music and responding to it in my own ways, became part of my daily life. Later, I tried various activities as a user of music: I danced and choreographed; [https://www.mixcloud.com/alnik/ I curated music] and performed as a DJ. But my desire to create was never fulfilled.
Last September, I co-facilitated together with my friend Bruno Morera - a musician, clown, street performer, and acrobat, who has been facilitating group experiences around Europe - a [https://www.nomadways.org/en/projects/music-moves-youth-2022 2-week music and sound residency in Burlats, France]. It was a challenge for me to be a trainer in an Erasmus+ training course and feeling as an imposter because of the lack of training in music. However, it turned out to be liberating.
 
'''[xpub year 1]''' Highlight of my last year was [https://issue.xpub.nl/18/ Special Issue 18: Radio Implicancies]. As a care-taker, I loved pre-editing, hosting and facilitating a weekly release. As a contributor - to reflect on a read or research with sound. I enjoyed mixing, editing, publishing, but also making and experimenting with sound. I participated in several jamming sessions (such as [http://www.harsmedia.com/SoundBlog/Archief/00880.php the X-unPub concert], facilitated by Harrold Schellinx) and felt included. I would like to create such spaces in the future and make that part of my artistic practice.
 
'''[visual translation & illustration]''' are my talents and skills that are always present in my work. They are part of my research, planning but also designing and illustrating the final publication.
 
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Relation to a larger context </span>==
 
'''[method]''' The work of Pauline Oliveros was a starting point and an inspiration for me to structure the sound jams. My goal is to create an inclusive space, open for people from any background and without musical training. The practice of deep listening, developed by her, is open to anyone and is based on improvisation. Sound is not limited to musical or speaking sounds, but is inclusive of all perceptible vibrations (sonic formations), which creates a space for openness and awareness.
 
'''[inclusivity]''' In her essay, ''The Amateur’s Armour'', Mariëtte Groot shares how she liberated herself from the pressure of calling herself an artist. She is an active part of Rotterdam’s music culture by running a venue and a shop, booking artists, researching the field of sound art and recently hosting a series of all-female live events at WORM. Her Re#Sister gigs, for instance, are a welcoming space for anyone who defines themselves as a female or non-binary, to join an improvised sound session. Her liberating approach is a great example of how there can be space for people to join music jams with or without musical training, no matter if they call themselves artists or not. Anyone can be a valuable part of the impro moments.
 
'''[joy in research]''' Coming from a very strict, serious and authoritarian educational system, I need to unlearn the maxima that “in order for my work to be valuable, it has to be serious and I have to suffer while doing it”. Writer, activist and facilitator, adrienne maree brown curated a collection of pieces on the topic of pleasure and feeling good in her ''Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good''. The understanding that pleasure is a measure of freedom is important for embracing that there should be no shame in activities that make us truly happy. During this research, I am also trying to create moments of joy and release the pressure that comes from other people’s expectations and one own’s self-restrictions.
 
'''[handbook, scores and improvisation]''' For this project, I will create instructions on how to do sound jams, which will include scores and descriptions of the steps to facilitate the activity. In order to do it, I will test various exercises and will look for different ways to describe them. For it, a great inspiration to me was ''Nature Study Notes'' by Scratch Orchestra - a collection of improvisation rites from 1969. There is always a facilitation element in the collective activities, even if they include improvisation, there is always structure provided, in which freedom takes place and opens the space for creativity.
 
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Who is the work for? </span>==


'''_educators:''' people who are facilitating various educational activities and are looking for ways to bring more mixed media in their activities; <br>
'''_educators:''' people who are facilitating various educational activities and are looking for ways to bring more mixed media in their activities; <br>


= <span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #cc00cc; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Archive </span> =
'''_artists:''' who are looking for new techniques for their practice and ways to experiment, boost their creative process; to find more ways to reflect over topics and contents; <br>
<br>  
 
[https://pad.xpub.nl/p/alnik-xpub2-proposaldrafting the first draft pad] [created during the Graduate Seminar on 29-09-2022]
'''_collectives:''' who are interested in exploring new methods of collective making and publishing
 
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> References/bibliography </span>==
 
brown a.m., 2019. Pleasure Activism. The Politics of Feeling Good. Chico, Edinburgh. AK Press. <br>
Cardew C. (ed.), 1969. Nature Study Notes. Scratch Orchestra, Experimental Music Catalogue. <br>
Groot, M. 2019. The Amateur's Armour. [online] Available at: <https://underbelly.nu/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/The-Amateurs-Armour.pdf> [Accessed 11 October 2022]. <br>
Oliveros, P., 2005. Deep Listening. New York. Deep Listening Publications. <br>

Latest revision as of 18:45, 18 November 2022

// back to Ål's main page
// back to Graduate Seminar
// see Al's XPUB2 thesis outline

Questions

_What do you want to make? 
_How do you plan to make it?
_What is your timetable?
_Why do you want to make it? 
_Who can help you and how? 
_Relation to previous practice 
_Relation to a larger context 
_Who is the work for (part of why do you want to make it)
_References/bibliography 

What do you want to make?

"sound jams" is a modular non-linear handbook with tools to facilitate listen-and-respond jams & publish their outputs

A handbook presenting a method to produce and publish collective sound-based publications. This hands-on guide will explore an applied method of deep listening sound jams by inviting people to participate in a collective sound-making and publishing process. By sound jams, I understand any facilitated process of sound-making and publishing that includes more than one person. The reader - an artist, educator or even a collective - will hold in their hands a collection of practical instructions on how to do the activities themselves, similar to Nature Study Notes: Improvisation Rites by the Scratch Orchestra.

The project focuses on bringing deeper attention to sound in the ways we perceive it, and the ways we respond with it. In the project, I will explore various ways to facilitate sound-making and publishing moments on the basis of listening and responding. The method is based on the concept of deep listening, originally developed by musician and educator Pauline Oliveros. In her practice, Oliveros investigated new ways to focus attention on music including her concept of deep listening - “a practice that is intended to heighten and expand consciousness of sound in as many dimensions of awareness and attentional dynamics as humanly possible”.

a prototype of sound jam documentation

The sound jams, being various ways of collective sound-making and publishing without the restriction of time, space, instruments or format, will be implemented in collaboration with my classmate Mitsa Chaida. Our researches will meet in the moments of experiments with other participants in order to try out different methods and tools.

Here is a prototype of documenting a sound jam, done at PZI on 10-10-2022

Sound is my choice for the core medium of this project because even though we are surrounded by it on a daily basis, it still feels quite inaccessible for many educators, facilitators, artists and artivists. Often associated with music, it is a reserved territory for people with musical training and for sound artists. In reality, it is far more accessible and there are many ways sound-making can be open for participants from any kind of background. Thus, this handbook aims at bringing another medium (or opening more possibilities for exploration of it) to artists, educators, publishers and collectives.

Why do you want to make it?

Facilitation is a substantial element of my artistic practice. Since 2016, I am experimenting with various ways of creating time and space for people to try out new artistic tools, no matter their previous experiences and training. Visual arts and digital communication were mainly the focus of the tools I was researching, but as a mixed-media artist, I am interested in bringing more sound as a format to these laboratories. During the first academic year of my studies at Experimental Publishing, I already noticed my increased interest in using more sound in my artistic practice. Highlights of my research and experiments were the pieces made for Special Issue 18: Radio Implicancies; the care-taking process of facilitating and the editorial work for some weekly releases; as well as participation in improvisational jams with the other XPUB students. I also facilitated my first sound-based artistic residency in September 2022, which allowed me to bring a new medium to my facilitation practice, a medium that worked well in a group of people, and that was a completely new form of expression to many of the participants in the workshop.

This project is also born out of the frustration of feeling oftentimes excluded from jamming sessions because of not being a musician (not having musical training). The element of collective making is also an important entry point for me. I am interested in exploring opportunities for collaborative creative work. I aim at bringing and establishing some principles in my art and facilitation practice: openness, inclusivity, improvisation and collectiveness. I want to create a safe space for experiments, where everyone is welcome, no matter their previous experiences and training.

How do you plan to make it?

the score of the jam session - following the structure of the clock

[research of methods for collective sound-making] I would like to start with a research of collective-sound making methods that are already published by other artists. Also, I will look for examples and inspirations of sound publications. Which of the sound publications I find interesting are done by a collective, a group of people. What is their process?

[sound jam experiments] Simultaneously, I would like to test experiments of collective sound-making and publishing. Since I already have facilitated a few moments, I would like to reflect on them and create prototypes for publishing them - as a tool, part of the handbook; and as a sound publication, an example.

[instruments] Whatever instruments you give to the participants in jam, shapes the whole experience. Thus, experimenting with giving various types of tools to make sound with, is another layer in the research to be taken into consideration, even though it is not the focus of the project.

[research publishing tools] Researching tools for publishing, in connection with collective publishing practices. What are the ways to share sound-based creations? Which one of them can be or already are collaborative?

[put things together] Describing the tools for collective sound-based publications making - how can we make sounds together; what are the ways to listen better, to respond with sound, to publish our sound works, to do it collectively?

What is your timetable?

_1 // october-january // research of existing methods for collective sound-making and publishing
_2 // october-january // drafting, shaping, testing tools for collective sound-making and publishing
_3 // october-may // facilitating and documenting sound jams & creating prototyping publication modules out of them (already facilitated two sound jams - M&Ms at PZI; and a public one at Leeszaal)
_4 // march-april // revision, reflection, revisiting instructions, feedback
_5 // april-may // prototyping the publication (with printable and digital elements)
_6 // april-may // deciding on what and how to present it at the grad show
_7 // may-june // making the publication
_8 // june-july // presenting the publication (grad show)

Who can help you and how?

For facilitating the sound jams, I will need the help of my friend and classmate Mitsa. Together, we already have been part of several workshops and sessions of sound-making exploration. We see our sound jams as a space for trying out our tools and reflecting on the way they are perceived by the participants. They are a way to do experiments and get immediate feedback about our facilitation tools, or the instruments we are testing.

For having participants in the jams and giving feedback, I would need the help of our XPUB2 group - to join our jam sessions. For the more open jams, would need to help in organising the event and getting materials (instruments, snacks, drinks). I plan to organise jams with PZI Archipelago in school, can contact Research station, too. For more public jams, will check with contacts outside school, such as Tisa (WORM, Re#sister), Manetta and Cristina (Varia), Leslie (for contact with local spaces) etc.

For finding space for the sound jams, I will need help to find locations and venues. Thus, I would need the help of our local connections in Rotterdam. For this, I would need help for getting in touch and finding appropriate spaces.

For prototyping and creating the publication, I will need help with laying it out, printing and assembling the way I imagine (because I have no prior experience in creating such a publication). I believe my friends and colleagues Jian and Gersande can help me with it.

For material base, I will need some instruments for sound-making, recorders, speakers. XPUB tutors can help with some equipment, for more - can make calls and ask local contacts, too. WDKA rental has some limited equipment, should explore also other options. Have to check what budgets do we have for making our master projects.

Relation to previous practice

[facilitation] Since 2016, I am part of Nomadways collective - an association based in France that designs and implements artistic experimental workshops for artists, activists, and educators - artivists. As a project designer and facilitator, I have experimented with various mediums that we often mix with topic. In our traditionally 2-week workshops, we create space for people to try out new tools and look for ways to implement them in their practice. Adding a whole new library of tools to my facilitation practice is a quite relevant endevour, but sharing it freely with the public is exactly what I am interested in terms of expanding and developing my work.

[sound-based experiments] My complicated relation to music and sound started in my early years of childhood when I was attracted to music but discouraged by my parents to pursue any musical training (they were calling me and my sisters “musical invalids”). Thus, I became a listener. Listening to music and responding to it in my own ways, became part of my daily life. Later, I tried various activities as a user of music: I danced and choreographed; I curated music and performed as a DJ. But my desire to create was never fulfilled. Last September, I co-facilitated together with my friend Bruno Morera - a musician, clown, street performer, and acrobat, who has been facilitating group experiences around Europe - a 2-week music and sound residency in Burlats, France. It was a challenge for me to be a trainer in an Erasmus+ training course and feeling as an imposter because of the lack of training in music. However, it turned out to be liberating.

[xpub year 1] Highlight of my last year was Special Issue 18: Radio Implicancies. As a care-taker, I loved pre-editing, hosting and facilitating a weekly release. As a contributor - to reflect on a read or research with sound. I enjoyed mixing, editing, publishing, but also making and experimenting with sound. I participated in several jamming sessions (such as the X-unPub concert, facilitated by Harrold Schellinx) and felt included. I would like to create such spaces in the future and make that part of my artistic practice.

[visual translation & illustration] are my talents and skills that are always present in my work. They are part of my research, planning but also designing and illustrating the final publication.

Relation to a larger context

[method] The work of Pauline Oliveros was a starting point and an inspiration for me to structure the sound jams. My goal is to create an inclusive space, open for people from any background and without musical training. The practice of deep listening, developed by her, is open to anyone and is based on improvisation. Sound is not limited to musical or speaking sounds, but is inclusive of all perceptible vibrations (sonic formations), which creates a space for openness and awareness.

[inclusivity] In her essay, The Amateur’s Armour, Mariëtte Groot shares how she liberated herself from the pressure of calling herself an artist. She is an active part of Rotterdam’s music culture by running a venue and a shop, booking artists, researching the field of sound art and recently hosting a series of all-female live events at WORM. Her Re#Sister gigs, for instance, are a welcoming space for anyone who defines themselves as a female or non-binary, to join an improvised sound session. Her liberating approach is a great example of how there can be space for people to join music jams with or without musical training, no matter if they call themselves artists or not. Anyone can be a valuable part of the impro moments.

[joy in research] Coming from a very strict, serious and authoritarian educational system, I need to unlearn the maxima that “in order for my work to be valuable, it has to be serious and I have to suffer while doing it”. Writer, activist and facilitator, adrienne maree brown curated a collection of pieces on the topic of pleasure and feeling good in her Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good. The understanding that pleasure is a measure of freedom is important for embracing that there should be no shame in activities that make us truly happy. During this research, I am also trying to create moments of joy and release the pressure that comes from other people’s expectations and one own’s self-restrictions.

[handbook, scores and improvisation] For this project, I will create instructions on how to do sound jams, which will include scores and descriptions of the steps to facilitate the activity. In order to do it, I will test various exercises and will look for different ways to describe them. For it, a great inspiration to me was Nature Study Notes by Scratch Orchestra - a collection of improvisation rites from 1969. There is always a facilitation element in the collective activities, even if they include improvisation, there is always structure provided, in which freedom takes place and opens the space for creativity.

Who is the work for?

_educators: people who are facilitating various educational activities and are looking for ways to bring more mixed media in their activities;

_artists: who are looking for new techniques for their practice and ways to experiment, boost their creative process; to find more ways to reflect over topics and contents;

_collectives: who are interested in exploring new methods of collective making and publishing

References/bibliography

brown a.m., 2019. Pleasure Activism. The Politics of Feeling Good. Chico, Edinburgh. AK Press.
Cardew C. (ed.), 1969. Nature Study Notes. Scratch Orchestra, Experimental Music Catalogue.
Groot, M. 2019. The Amateur's Armour. [online] Available at: <https://underbelly.nu/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/The-Amateurs-Armour.pdf> [Accessed 11 October 2022].
Oliveros, P., 2005. Deep Listening. New York. Deep Listening Publications.