Student Works / Master
SoundS Master Exhibition 22
public exhibition
26–29 May 2022
Photos © Kathrin Scheidt
26–29 May 2022
Collegium Hungaricum Berlin
Dorotheenstraße 12
10117 Berlin
Opening
26 May 2022 | 4–8 PM
Exhibition
27 May 2022 | 10 AM — 6 PM
28 May 2022 | 10 AM — 8 PM
29 May 2022 | 10 AM — 2 PM
Performances
26 May | Juan Aguilar | 5PM | CHB
Coila-Leah Enderstein | 7PM | CHB
27 May | Coila-Leah Enderstein | 5PM | CHB
28 May | Kate Miller | 6PM | CHB
Awu | 7PM | CHB
Workshops
29 May | Diane Barbé | 6:30–10PM | floating university, Lilienthalstr. 32, 10965 Berlin
This year’s finishing class of Sound Studies and Sonic Arts exhibited their master’s works on 26–29 May 2022 at the Collegium Hungaricum Berlin.
Juan Aguilar
My Other Self
“My Other Self” is an interactive sound installation comprised by eight microphones, one computer and eight speakers ; designed as a musical instrument, a composition and a score ; and set in a room that integrates performers, composers and audience, regardless of where they stand.
Sounds transduced by the microphones are boosted and synthesized by a computer which returns them through the speakers. The output is then fed back into the system, whose processing components vary in configuration depending on the levels and pitches the computer reads, providing a human listener with the possibility of perceiving a permanent change in spectrum in which he/she has an influence.
Juan Sebastián Aguilar, Nicolás Daleman, Rafael García and Sebastián Rojas will be offering a performance using “My Other Self” on 26 May at 5 p.m.
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Awu (Yuhua Li)
Virtual Collision
Virtual Collision is an interactive video game theater piece. It aims to expand the boundary of video game and theater, to combine them into an interesting form. The piece is based on the artistic residency in Canfranc, the residency organized by Munich SVS collective, and in coöperation with Canfranc Underground Laboratory — LSC (Laboratorio Subterráneo de Canfranc). The residency gives a chance for artists to interact with the scientists, and work under the topic of finding dark matter. Virtual Collision took the information of dark matter, quantum physics, and the residency experience as input, transforming them into a part of the video game as output.
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Diane Barbé
The Alien Kin : Musicking with the Birds
Sunday 29 May 2022 | from 18:30–22:00
at floating university, Lilienthalstr. 32, 10965 Berlin
The Alien Kin is an ongoing participatory reseach project with a listening session, an introduction to bird calls and other sound making devices, and a musicking moment at sunset in the big open space of floating university.
In search of alternative timbres, tunings and patterns, we mimick and answer those sounds that touch us. Birds and insects, in particular, have evolved alongside humans, vocalising in ways that mark the weather, the seasons, and the general air of the time. After a first edition in the Black Forest in April 2022, this first Berlin iteration of the Alien Kin offers a listening and musicking moment, using primitive self-made soundmakers to listen to, respond to, and play with, those other inhabitants of the air at floating university.
The workshop is free of charge and has limited capacity ; interested participants should RSVP to : dianediane@gmx.net
The location is wheelchair accessible and held outdoors. Assistance animals welcomed.
The workshop will be conducted in English. No musical experience is necessary. Vegetarian food will be provided.
Production, scoring by Diane Barbé. Instruments realised collaboratively by Diane Barbé & Joe Summers.
Nico Espinoza
Slow Down. Machine Ecology #1
An installation about sonic relations between machines, natures and humans and the possible ecologies that such relations might bring forth. A set of sound machines was design and build as a response to a two month field recording journey trough Chile and Brasil. These machine set will articulate a systemic relation between different spaces and times, between electric and nature landscapes, a relation (and system) that dislocates sonic events and signals, setting an ecology and its locality in its own term.
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Dillon Bastan
Criticality
This film attempts to bridge the concept of criticality from sterile mathematics to life, spirituality, and personal experience. In doing so things get murky and quirky. This may lead one to wonder, as with one’s own life, what was this film even really about ?
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Eagle (Hou Lam Wu)
Junction
Junction is a 32-Channel Sound Installation with a 1‑hour sound composition loop, based on various implications of space in terms of geometry, trajectories and materiality. What do we choose to listen to when there are infinite choices ?
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Coila-Leah Enderstein
Songs from me to you
Songs from Me to You is an experimental performance by Coila-Leah Enderstein. Through encounters with historical figures and with the help of particular instruments, the piece situates acoustic knowledge production within the context of coloniality/modernity. With a focus on Germany’s imperial period from 1871 — 1918, the performance playfully works as something between a song cycle and a lecture, incorporating decolonial approaches to sound, listening and knowledge.
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Kate Miller
Composition for Turntables
An installation and experimental, compositional performance for turntables exploring rhythm and emergent patterns through the use of locked grooves.
Performance : 28 May | 7 PM | CHB
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
David Goldberg
The Celestial Random
The 4 channel sound installation translates cosmic rays and radiation into an audible display. The resulting generative composition is spatialized by custom-made loudspeakers. This piece is based on a discussion of the concept of soft errors, which originates from the field of computer science. In the work, however, this concept is poetically expanded and placed in an evolution-theoretical context that critically addresses the question of mutation.
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Yun-Chu Liang
In-between
Since the beginning of 2022, I started an experiment by inviting people to sit with me in a hustle market and share tea. To explore care in everyday life encounters, we practice listening together and tuning in to each other. After some months, this experiment will continue in CHB Berlin. It is an ongoing documentation of the moments. Let’s listen to the sound of a cup of tea together !
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Tornike Margvelashvili
It Grows/Glows Faint Within
‘It Grows/Glows Faint Within’ is a 5 channel sound and light installation where ambient soundscapes based on folk sacred choirs and electronically created drones are projected from cube shaped speaker sculptures, made out of concrete and translucent acrylic. The installation creates a spatial sonic sculpture mimicking an aura of ancient prayer spaces.
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Robin Rutenberg
Stonesong
“Stonesong” is an exploratory binaural VR environment implementing experimental storytelling and poetics as foundations for a feminist methodological approach to world-building. When journeying through this ethereal realm, the listener encounters multiple 3D rendered statues of the artist and other stone structures forged from both familiar and transcendent matter. Sonic elements of voice and stone compose a soundscape further illuminating themes of materiality, imaginative potential, reflection, resonance, and time. “Stonesong” contemplates the complex, layered, and shared constitutive conditions of metamorphic stones and trans* bodies, specifically ‘stone butches.’
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Misantrop (Nicolai Vesterkær Krog)
Perfect Pattern
Audio play about home, relationships, ideals, routines and control.
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Aodhagán O’Flaherty
perspective : make world (near future)
A video installation that poetically plays with a measured asynchrony of diegetic sound. From a point-of-view perspective, rotating landscapes create a world from time-bending moving-image.
A fortuitous future found from rock and water’s interrelationship.
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Samuel Perea-Díaz
UNAIDS_FactSheet_en.pdf
The installation generates impulses of a 20kHz sine wave that displays the pulse rate of the number of deaths from AIDS-related causes worldwide in a year. The piece sonifies the most recent statistics of UNAIDS, which is the world’s most extensive data collection on the HIV epidemic. This artwork is part of a theoretical research that maps the impact of the early AIDS epidemic in specific sound-focused artworks.
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Lottie Sebes
Mouthpiece
I held my replica of Christine Forster’s* vocal tract and pushed air through the hollow of its unique undulations, before I saw her face on a video call. When she spoke the words ‘Bahn’ (A), ‘Beet’ (E), ‘mit’ (I), ‘Offen’ (O) and ‘Butter’ (U), lying rigid in an MRI machine, a part of her was transformed into a speaking machine.
This sculptural, multi-channel sound installation explores the unease and unaddressed intimacy of speaking in an alien voice. Using AI generated voices in various stages of training, modelled on Sebes and Forster, it challenges asymmetric power relationships between the silent, disassociated operator of a vocal synthesizer and the voice it produces. Mouthpiece delves into the fleshy and personal relation of holding another human’s throat in your hands, of assuming their identity, of wearing the skin of their voice.
*name has been changed
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
Photo ©Kathrin Scheidt
Menghan Wang
Silver Ripples
Silver Ripples is an installation consisting of a 6‑channel sound composition of field recordings and a hand-made wind chime made of recycled and recyclable construction metals. The installation hints at 6 secluded places in Berlin, where other 6 hand-made wind chimes were hung, left without any additional information, and continuously sound as parts of those environments throughout and after the announced exhibition period. The wind chimes can be discovered whether expectedly or unexpectedly and given meanings by potential audiences as parts of their own journeys, or as sounding objects accompanying contemplations or meditations at those places.
Photo © Kathrin Scheidt
The Master candidates of the Sound Studies and Sonic Arts Masters program, will publicly defend their master’s theses on 11–13 July, 2022 at the UdK, Bundesallee.
UdK Berlin
Bundesallee 1–12
Room 340
10719 Berlin
MONDAY 11 July 2022
11:45 Diane Barbé Dr. Julia Schröder / Dr. Gilles Aubry
13:00 Eagle (Hou Lam Wu) Prof. Dr. Martin Supper / Dr. Johannes Regnier
14:15 Kate Miller Dr. Johannes Regnier / Dr. Julia Schröder
16:30 Dillon Bastan Dr.Johannes Regnier / Steffen Martin
17:45 Aodhagán O’Flaherty Jacob Eriksen / Steffen Martin
TUESDAY 12 July 2022
09:45 Yun Chu Liang Christiane Hommelstein / Jan Thoben
11:15 Misantrop (Nicolai Vesterkær Krog) Gary Schultz / Christiane Hommelstein
12:30 Tornike Margvelashvili Hans Peter Kuhn / Gary Schultz
15:00 Coila-Leah Enderstein Hans Peter Kuhn / Dr. Jasmine Guffond
16:15 Samuel Perea-Díaz Dr. Brandon LaBelle / Monika Zyla
17:30 Lottie Sebes Hans Peter Kuhn / Prof. Dr. Viktoria Tkaczyk
WEDNESDAY 13 July 2022
10:00 Juan Aguilar Hans Peter Kuhn / Prof. Daisuke Ishida
11:15 David Goldberg Thomas Koch / Prof. Daisuke Ishida
12:30 Menghan Wang Prof. Daisuke Ishida / Prof. Dr. Sabine Sanio
15:00 Nico Espinoza Jan Thoben / Jacob Eriksen
16:15 Awu (Yuhua Li) Tobias Bilgeri / Jacob Eriksen
17:30 Robin Rutenberg Tobias Bilgeri / Chelsea Leventhal
Graphics/Photo ©Kathrin Scheidt