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==What do you want to make?==
“Sound is pervasive, it spreads out in a space, connecting all bodies that it encounters. It is not an object or an attribute of an object but is generated by the reciprocal relationship between context object and subjects.” Elena Biserna in <span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Walking, Listening and Soundmaking </span>
A large scale textile soundboard (made as an interactive textile), containing a series of noises collected from public spaces, more specifically squares, as their form, place and function have historically (and still today) contribute to the urban development and feel of the city.  
 
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">bleep bloop</span>
 
==<span><tt>What do you want to make?</tt></span>==
[[File:Picture public event.jpg|right|330px]]
 
For the graduation project, I want to make a <span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">large scale textile soundboard</span> (made as an interactive textile), containing a series of noises collected from public spaces, more specifically squares. This is because the squares form, place and function have historically (and still today) contributed to the urban development and feel of the city.  


The instrument can be played to create different public soundscapes, inviting the person interacting with it to listen, move and imagine a path. Different points produce different sounds caught in the city. The person playing has to move and 'perform' a distinct choreography each time because of the distance between the triggers playing the sounds, enhancing the physicality and embodying the soundscape.  
The instrument can be played to create different public soundscapes, inviting the person interacting with it to listen, move and imagine a path. Different points produce different sounds caught in the city. The person playing has to move and 'perform' a distinct choreography each time because of the distance between the triggers playing the sounds, enhancing the physicality and embodying the soundscape.  


The fibers used for the production of the soundboard will partly be sourced from the squares where the listening and capturing of the sounds will occur. They will be washed, taken apart (perhaps dyed) and re-spun into yarn. This will be done to create a stronger connection to where the sounds originate from.
Playing allows the user to let go of expectations and predictability, enhances chances and small changes, and helps notice things from another perspective. I would like the 'player' to take away from the experience, is the notion that city soundscapes are really worth listening to, they are so rich in information and contradistinct from one another, adding a layer to the definition of public space itself.  


==How do you plan to make it?==
The fibers used for the production of the soundboard will partly be sourced from the squares where the listening and capturing of the sounds will occur. They will be washed, taken apart (perhaps dyed) and re-spun (by me) into yarn. This will be done to create a stronger connection to where the sounds originate from. The rest of the fibers used will be natural (wool), because of its specific soft and inviting texture.
Learn how to make my own conductive yarn, spin test yarn with different concentrations of metal and test them out on smaller circuits.


Collect sounds, and fibers from squares in Rotterdam. This will be done by using a series of different listening methods, experiments and exercises I will come about during the development of the project. These methods will be documented and explained in the thesis.  
==<span><tt>Why do you want to make it?</tt></span>==
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Sound connects.</span> It is not tangible but exists so powerfully in space. It identifies places so distinctively but is not usually thought of or used to describe one other than ‘noisy’ or ‘silent’. Imagining and playing with mundane sounds, exploring the urban landscape with no visual aid, to notice and create new imaginary paths. Re-publishing existing and real-life 'boring' common sounds. Every time someone plays with the project, it will have a unique quality to it. The player will likely not be able to repeat the sequence of sounds, making the soundscape so subjective depending on the performer, much like the sound of the city. Listening is something so important to me, and I would like for this project to turn players into 'listeners'. It is an invitation to notice these differences in the city soundscape, the small tone changes and how sequences of sound vary each time they happen.  


Design and test an 'interface' for the textile, decide the spacing between the sensors on a prototype circuit, have many people dance to it.
Fabric, like sound, is so textured. It invokes memories, feelings and is such a malleable and ever changing material. It is flexible and can adapt and bounce around its surroundings like a liquid, or like sound itself. Like city noise, its texture is so ordinary that it becomes almost invisible.
 
Another really important part of the piece to me, is the process of making it itself, spending time in squares, observing and listening to their dynamics. Collecting discarded fibers (e.g. a single glove), and collecting 'discarded' sounds. Making my own sensors with these materials from scratch. Manually spinning, knitting and weaving all of this material to bring it together again, in another form.
 
==<span><tt>How do you plan to make it?</tt></span>==
[[File:Pressure sensor.gif|left|330px]]
To be able to create this soundboard, I have identified a few crucial development elements:
Learn how to make my own conductive yarn, spin test yarn with different concentrations of metal and test them out on smaller circuits. Collect fibers, wash and re-spin them into yarn that I will use for the textile.


Collect sounds, and fibers from squares in Rotterdam. This will be done by using a series of different listening methods, experiments and exercises I will come about during the development of the project. These methods will be documented and explained in the thesis, and they will set the tone for playful listening.


[[File:Pressure sensor.gif]]
Design and test an 'interface' for the textile, decide the spacing between the sensors on a prototype circuit, have many people dance to it.


==What is your timetable?==
Work on small experiments of patches as well as installation shapes to test touch and find what people are drawn to interact and really play with.
'''October''' - recording, collecting and listening, drawing circuits, read more on interactive textiles, prepare for public moment and source materials needed for interactive textiles (yarn). Learn intarsia knitting.


'''November''' - recording, collecting and listening, test spin conductive yarn, do smaller projects involving woven (and knitted) circuits. Public moment tests and adaptations, coloquim with Michel (another testing opportunity), finalize proposal.  
==<span><tt>What is your timetable?</tt></span>==
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">October</span> - recording, collecting and listening, drawing circuits, read more on interactive textiles, prepare for public moment and source materials needed for interactive textiles (yarn). Learn intarsia knitting.


'''December''' - recording, collecting and listening, experiment with circuit connections, weaving circuits
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">November</span> - recording, collecting and listening, test spin conductive yarn, do smaller projects involving woven (and knitted) circuits. Public moment tests and adaptations, coloquim with Michel (another testing opportunity), finalize proposal.


'''January''' - recording, collecting and listening. Test distances between sensors (outside of the fabric) with larger groups, observe the choreographies people perform while playing. Start testing with woven (or knitted) samples.
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">December</span> - recording, collecting and listening, experiment with circuit connections, weaving circuits


'''February''' - recording, collecting and listening. Start selecting which sounds to use and why. Experiment with sounds on the sensors (in their skeleton form before they are integrated in the fabric)
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">January</span> - recording, collecting and listening. Test distances between sensors (outside of the fabric) with larger groups, observe the choreographies people perform while playing. Start testing with woven (or knitted) samples.


'''March''' - recording, collecting and listening. Sound editing, making adjustments and playing with the music/instrument. Experiments with overlays, pitch adaptations, 'cheat codes' of combinations of pressing spots that will allow for sound manipulations to happen.
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">February</span> - recording, collecting and listening. Start selecting which sounds to use and why. Experiment with sounds on the sensors (in their skeleton form before they are integrated in the fabric)


'''April''' - Finish preparing all materials for the final fabric. Spin yarn, finish the circuit and code, see what is missing for the piece and collect everything
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">March</span> - recording, collecting and listening. Sound editing, making adjustments and playing with the music/instrument. Experiments with overlays, pitch adaptations, 'cheat codes' of combinations of pressing spots that will allow for sound manipulations to happen.


'''May''' - Making the final fabric! And troubleshooting
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">April</span> - Finish preparing all materials for the final fabric. Spin yarn, finish the circuit and code, see what is missing for the piece and collect everything


'''June''' - Troubleshooting, graduation show, collective publication
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">May</span> - Making the final fabric! And troubleshooting


==Why do you want to make it?==
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">June</span> - Troubleshooting, graduation show, collective publication
Sound connects. It is not physical but exists so powerfully in space. It identifies places so distinctively but is not usually thought of or used to describe one other than ‘noisy’ or ‘silent’. Imagining and playing with mundane sounds, exploring the urban landscape with no visual aid, to notice and create new imaginary paths. Re-publishing existing and real-life 'boring' common sounds. Every time someone plays with the project, it will have a unique quality to it. The player will likely not be able to repeat the sequence of sounds, making the soundscape so subjective depending on the performer, much like the sound of the city. Listening is something so important to me, and I would like for this project to turn players into 'listeners'. Fabric, like sound, is so textured. It invokes memory and is such a malleable and ever changing material. It is flexible and can adapt and bounce around its surroundings like a liquid, or like sound itself. Like city noise, its texture is so ordinary that it becomes almost invisible.


==Who can help you and how?==
==<span><tt>Who can help you and how?</tt></span>==
'''Research and Resources'''
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Research and Resources</span>
Tutors, classmates and supervisor, by discussing the ideas, reading each others work and talking about research area, many references and recommendation come up, especially from areas that I have yet to look into, or quite far from my research but with overlaps in some way.  
Tutors, classmates and supervisor, by discussing the ideas, reading each others work and talking about research area, many references and recommendation come up, especially from areas that I have yet to look into, or quite far from my research but with overlaps in some way.  
This also counts for resources, sourcing and machines that I could potentially use for production.
This also counts for resources, sourcing and machines that I could potentially use for production.


'''Listening and recording'''
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Listening and recording</span>
People that i will encounter while listening in public space, maybe sharing personal listening stories and observations.  
People that i will encounter while listening in public space, maybe sharing personal listening stories and observations.  


'''Prototyping the circuit + code'''
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Prototyping the circuit + code</span>
Joseph and Manetta, the people from interaction station, workshops on wearables and interactive textiles, and possibly individuals still to be contacted with interactive textile experience like Wendy Van Wynsberghe, Anja Hertenberger and maybe more:)  
Joseph and Manetta, the people from interaction station, workshops on wearables and interactive textiles, and possibly individuals still to be contacted with interactive textile experience like Wendy Van Wynsberghe, Anja Hertenberger and maybe more:)  


'''Weaving (or knitting) the piece'''
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Weaving (or knitting) the piece</span>
Tutors at the fabric station, by giving advice on techniques, methods and materials that would help in the construction. Station skills at the fabric station.  
Tutors at the fabric station, by giving advice on techniques, methods and materials that would help in the construction. Station skills at the fabric station.  


'''Testing'''
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Testing</span>
My classmates and people around the studio. Guests at public moments, and (hopefully) also interested people I will encounter while in public space.
My classmates and people around the studio. Guests at public moments, and (hopefully) also interested people I will encounter while in public space.


==Relation to previous practice==
==<span><tt>Relation to previous practice</tt></span>==
I feel very connected to both listening and traditional garment construction techniques. Working with textiles is something that has been present again and again in my practice.
I feel very connected to both listening and traditional garment construction techniques. Working with textiles is something that has been present again and again in my practice.


'''Before starting Xpub''', I studied Industrial Product Design, and I focused on designing and producing soft objects out of fabric and paper. I also worked in a fashion Atelier for 6 months, mainly producing prints and patterns for textiles, sewing by hand and working with a mixture of delicate soft materials, metal and mylar to create sculptural garments.
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Before starting Xpub</span>, I studied Industrial Product Design, and I focused on designing and producing soft objects out of fabric and paper. I also worked in a fashion Atelier for 6 months, mainly producing prints and patterns for textiles, sewing by hand and working with a mixture of delicate soft materials, metal and mylar to create sculptural garments.


'''In Special Issue 22''', I worked on the 'curtain', a sewn modular archive as an element to 'safekeep' and protect the different projects, sounds and survival tools that were created for the SI. I also focused a lot on field recording, exploring sound in public space and interactive radio making (with Hitchikers Guide to an Active Archive with Thijs and Rosa).
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">In Special Issue 22</span>, I worked on the 'curtain', a sewn modular archive as an element to 'safekeep' and protect the different projects, sounds and survival tools that were created for the SI. I also focused a lot on field recording, exploring sound in public space and interactive radio making (with Hitchikers Guide to an Active Archive with Thijs and Rosa).


{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
|[[File:archival-oceanb-protocoller-open.jpg|thumb|upright=0.75|Archival Oceans Zine (continuation of Hitchikers Guide to an Active Archive (with Thijs))]]
|[[File:archival-oceanb-protocoller-open.jpg|300px]]
|[[File:Curtain on Launch day.png|thumb|Curtain on Launch day]]
|[[File:Curtain on Launch day.png|300px]]
|}
|}


In '''Special Issue 23''', I was really inspired to work with word/sentence manipulation, connecting it with sewing and quilting. I made experiments with sewing on paper, trying to create a very literal word quilt. I wanted to try to show the 'infrastructure' of my thoughts while reading and annotating these texts in a visual way, incorporating the seams metaphor quite literally. I tried to connect ideas from different texts by making a sewn collage.
In <span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Special Issue 23</span>, I was really inspired to work with word/sentence manipulation, connecting it with sewing and quilting. I made experiments with sewing on paper, trying to create a very literal word quilt. I wanted to try to show the 'infrastructure' of my thoughts while reading and annotating these texts in a visual way, incorporating the seams metaphor quite literally. I tried to connect ideas from different texts by making a sewn collage.


{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
|[[File:Sewing on paper.jpg|thumb|Experiment with sewing annotations and parts of text]]
|[[File:Sewing on paper.jpg|300px]]
|[[File:Sewing on paper1.png|thumb|Testing using my sewing machine on thick paper]]
|[[File:Sewing on paper1.png|300px]]
|}
|}


In '''Special Issue 24''', I worked with a very similar research topic to what I will be looking into in the graduation project and thesis, focusing on listening in public space, using textiles and paper to translate the sound.
In <span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Special Issue 24</span>, I worked with a very similar research topic to what I will be looking into in the graduation project and thesis, focusing on listening in public space, using textiles and paper to translate the sound.
I worked on 'Knitting City Noise' a work in progress that focused on static listening, from one fixed point of view by using a sound sensor in Marconi Plein. From that, the sensor recorder yes sound or no sound based on the loudness around it. I then translated this nominal data to a punch card for knitting and am currently knitting it.  
I worked on 'Knitting City Noise' a work in progress that focused on static listening, from one fixed point of view by using a sound sensor in Marconi Plein. From that, the sensor recorder yes sound or no sound based on the loudness around it. I then translated this nominal data to a punch card for knitting and am currently knitting it.  


{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
|[[File:Punch card.png|thumb|alt=Punch card for the knitting machine, it is unused and has a printed grid (24x60 squares))|Punch card]]
|[[File:Punch card.png|300px]]
|[[File:Punched card.png|thumb|alt=Punched card|Punched card]]
|[[File:Punched card.png|300px]]
|}
|}


I also recorded sound while moving, in a series of walks, runs and cycles around Rotterdam. I then listened back and wrote down all the sounds I heard as a list, screen printed them onto cotton and sewed the paths of the recordings creating a subjective sound map of the city.
I also recorded sound while moving, in a series of walks, runs and cycles around Rotterdam. I then listened back and wrote down all the sounds I heard as a list, screen printed them onto cotton and sewed the paths of the recordings creating a subjective sound map of the city.  


{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
|[[File:Screenprint result.png|thumb|screenprint result]]
|[[File:Screenprint result.png|330px]]
|[[File:Trial on paper, too thin.jpg|thumb|test on paper]]
|[[File:Picture sound map.jpg|400px]]
|}
|}


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{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
|[[File:Documnetation3.jpg|thumb]]
|[[File:Documnetation3.jpg|300px]]
|[[File:Documnetation4.jpg|thumb]]
|[[File:Documnetation4.jpg|300px]]


|}
|}


==Relation to a larger context==
==<span><tt>Relation to a larger context</tt></span>==
The project will build on research surrounding the practices of soundwalking and deep listening, starting from defining listening and hearing as two very distinct things. In 'Deep Listening' Oliveros observes how listening is an active practice, a fully conscious choice, whereas hearing is simply something involuntary.
 
==<span><tt>References</tt></span>==
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Deep Listening A Composer's Sound Practice</span>, Pauline Oliveros
 
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Walking, Listening and Soundmaking</span>, Elena Biserna
 
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Walking from scores</span>, Elena Biserna
 
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">LISTEN</span>, Max Neuhaus
 
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Inaudible Cities</span>, Jacek Smolicki
 
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Listening: A Research Method in Art & Design</span>, edited by Alice Twemlow


<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Basta Now: women, trans & non-binary in experimental music</span>, Fanny Chiarello


==References/bibliography==
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Smooth City</span>, Renè Boer
Deep Listening A Composer's Sound Practice, Pauline Oliveros


Walking, Listening and Soundmaking, Elena Biserna
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">The rest is noise</span>, Alex Ross


Basta Now: women, trans & non-binary in experimental music Fanny Chiarello
<span style="text-shadow: 0 0 10px #FF0808;">Scratch Music</span>, Cornelius Cardew

Latest revision as of 23:29, 22 November 2024

“Sound is pervasive, it spreads out in a space, connecting all bodies that it encounters. It is not an object or an attribute of an object but is generated by the reciprocal relationship between context object and subjects.” Elena Biserna in Walking, Listening and Soundmaking 

bleep bloop

What do you want to make?

Picture public event.jpg

For the graduation project, I want to make a large scale textile soundboard (made as an interactive textile), containing a series of noises collected from public spaces, more specifically squares. This is because the squares form, place and function have historically (and still today) contributed to the urban development and feel of the city.

The instrument can be played to create different public soundscapes, inviting the person interacting with it to listen, move and imagine a path. Different points produce different sounds caught in the city. The person playing has to move and 'perform' a distinct choreography each time because of the distance between the triggers playing the sounds, enhancing the physicality and embodying the soundscape.

Playing allows the user to let go of expectations and predictability, enhances chances and small changes, and helps notice things from another perspective. I would like the 'player' to take away from the experience, is the notion that city soundscapes are really worth listening to, they are so rich in information and contradistinct from one another, adding a layer to the definition of public space itself.

The fibers used for the production of the soundboard will partly be sourced from the squares where the listening and capturing of the sounds will occur. They will be washed, taken apart (perhaps dyed) and re-spun (by me) into yarn. This will be done to create a stronger connection to where the sounds originate from. The rest of the fibers used will be natural (wool), because of its specific soft and inviting texture.

Why do you want to make it?

Sound connects. It is not tangible but exists so powerfully in space. It identifies places so distinctively but is not usually thought of or used to describe one other than ‘noisy’ or ‘silent’. Imagining and playing with mundane sounds, exploring the urban landscape with no visual aid, to notice and create new imaginary paths. Re-publishing existing and real-life 'boring' common sounds. Every time someone plays with the project, it will have a unique quality to it. The player will likely not be able to repeat the sequence of sounds, making the soundscape so subjective depending on the performer, much like the sound of the city. Listening is something so important to me, and I would like for this project to turn players into 'listeners'. It is an invitation to notice these differences in the city soundscape, the small tone changes and how sequences of sound vary each time they happen.

Fabric, like sound, is so textured. It invokes memories, feelings and is such a malleable and ever changing material. It is flexible and can adapt and bounce around its surroundings like a liquid, or like sound itself. Like city noise, its texture is so ordinary that it becomes almost invisible.

Another really important part of the piece to me, is the process of making it itself, spending time in squares, observing and listening to their dynamics. Collecting discarded fibers (e.g. a single glove), and collecting 'discarded' sounds. Making my own sensors with these materials from scratch. Manually spinning, knitting and weaving all of this material to bring it together again, in another form.

How do you plan to make it?

Pressure sensor.gif

To be able to create this soundboard, I have identified a few crucial development elements: Learn how to make my own conductive yarn, spin test yarn with different concentrations of metal and test them out on smaller circuits. Collect fibers, wash and re-spin them into yarn that I will use for the textile.

Collect sounds, and fibers from squares in Rotterdam. This will be done by using a series of different listening methods, experiments and exercises I will come about during the development of the project. These methods will be documented and explained in the thesis, and they will set the tone for playful listening.

Design and test an 'interface' for the textile, decide the spacing between the sensors on a prototype circuit, have many people dance to it.

Work on small experiments of patches as well as installation shapes to test touch and find what people are drawn to interact and really play with.

What is your timetable?

October - recording, collecting and listening, drawing circuits, read more on interactive textiles, prepare for public moment and source materials needed for interactive textiles (yarn). Learn intarsia knitting.

November - recording, collecting and listening, test spin conductive yarn, do smaller projects involving woven (and knitted) circuits. Public moment tests and adaptations, coloquim with Michel (another testing opportunity), finalize proposal.

December - recording, collecting and listening, experiment with circuit connections, weaving circuits

January - recording, collecting and listening. Test distances between sensors (outside of the fabric) with larger groups, observe the choreographies people perform while playing. Start testing with woven (or knitted) samples.

February - recording, collecting and listening. Start selecting which sounds to use and why. Experiment with sounds on the sensors (in their skeleton form before they are integrated in the fabric)

March - recording, collecting and listening. Sound editing, making adjustments and playing with the music/instrument. Experiments with overlays, pitch adaptations, 'cheat codes' of combinations of pressing spots that will allow for sound manipulations to happen.

April - Finish preparing all materials for the final fabric. Spin yarn, finish the circuit and code, see what is missing for the piece and collect everything

May - Making the final fabric! And troubleshooting

June - Troubleshooting, graduation show, collective publication

Who can help you and how?

Research and Resources Tutors, classmates and supervisor, by discussing the ideas, reading each others work and talking about research area, many references and recommendation come up, especially from areas that I have yet to look into, or quite far from my research but with overlaps in some way. This also counts for resources, sourcing and machines that I could potentially use for production.

Listening and recording People that i will encounter while listening in public space, maybe sharing personal listening stories and observations.

Prototyping the circuit + code Joseph and Manetta, the people from interaction station, workshops on wearables and interactive textiles, and possibly individuals still to be contacted with interactive textile experience like Wendy Van Wynsberghe, Anja Hertenberger and maybe more:)

Weaving (or knitting) the piece Tutors at the fabric station, by giving advice on techniques, methods and materials that would help in the construction. Station skills at the fabric station.

Testing My classmates and people around the studio. Guests at public moments, and (hopefully) also interested people I will encounter while in public space.

Relation to previous practice

I feel very connected to both listening and traditional garment construction techniques. Working with textiles is something that has been present again and again in my practice.

Before starting Xpub, I studied Industrial Product Design, and I focused on designing and producing soft objects out of fabric and paper. I also worked in a fashion Atelier for 6 months, mainly producing prints and patterns for textiles, sewing by hand and working with a mixture of delicate soft materials, metal and mylar to create sculptural garments.

In Special Issue 22, I worked on the 'curtain', a sewn modular archive as an element to 'safekeep' and protect the different projects, sounds and survival tools that were created for the SI. I also focused a lot on field recording, exploring sound in public space and interactive radio making (with Hitchikers Guide to an Active Archive with Thijs and Rosa).

Archival-oceanb-protocoller-open.jpg Curtain on Launch day.png

In Special Issue 23, I was really inspired to work with word/sentence manipulation, connecting it with sewing and quilting. I made experiments with sewing on paper, trying to create a very literal word quilt. I wanted to try to show the 'infrastructure' of my thoughts while reading and annotating these texts in a visual way, incorporating the seams metaphor quite literally. I tried to connect ideas from different texts by making a sewn collage.

Sewing on paper.jpg Sewing on paper1.png

In Special Issue 24, I worked with a very similar research topic to what I will be looking into in the graduation project and thesis, focusing on listening in public space, using textiles and paper to translate the sound. I worked on 'Knitting City Noise' a work in progress that focused on static listening, from one fixed point of view by using a sound sensor in Marconi Plein. From that, the sensor recorder yes sound or no sound based on the loudness around it. I then translated this nominal data to a punch card for knitting and am currently knitting it.

Punch card.png Punched card.png

I also recorded sound while moving, in a series of walks, runs and cycles around Rotterdam. I then listened back and wrote down all the sounds I heard as a list, screen printed them onto cotton and sewed the paths of the recordings creating a subjective sound map of the city.

Screenprint result.png Picture sound map.jpg


I also worked on 'Scripts to read the City' with Mania, a publication containing a series of scripts to look and listen in public space. The project imagines an urban environment that can be read, analyzed and criticized as a text. By reading the city in this way we find other possible ways of seeing, moving and listening. In a scripted city, marked by escalating levels of perfection, efficiency and control, the emancipatory aspects of urban life are undermined, allowing little room for anything that doesn't fit the image of the "norm".

Scripts to Read the City is an attempt to foster diverse experiences and uses of space, similar to a theater script interpreted differently by each actor. The tools of navigation are a device indicating which character to play and a guide, including a set of directions and instructions.

The project explores a relation between scripts and spontaneity, chance and control, and how scripts and unpredictability can enhance each other, stimulating imagination, encouraging us to engage with space from another perspective.

We also held a workshop based on the publication at SIGN in Groningen as a part of Spread Zinefest.

Documnetation3.jpg Documnetation4.jpg

Relation to a larger context

The project will build on research surrounding the practices of soundwalking and deep listening, starting from defining listening and hearing as two very distinct things. In 'Deep Listening' Oliveros observes how listening is an active practice, a fully conscious choice, whereas hearing is simply something involuntary.

References

Deep Listening A Composer's Sound Practice, Pauline Oliveros

Walking, Listening and Soundmaking, Elena Biserna

Walking from scores, Elena Biserna

LISTEN, Max Neuhaus

Inaudible Cities, Jacek Smolicki

Listening: A Research Method in Art & Design, edited by Alice Twemlow

Basta Now: women, trans & non-binary in experimental music, Fanny Chiarello

Smooth City, Renè Boer

The rest is noise, Alex Ross

Scratch Music, Cornelius Cardew