edited by Hans D. Christ, Iris Dressler, Christine Peters – Acts of Voicing: The Poetics and Politics of the Voice

Acts-of-Voicing

Spector Books, ISBN-13: 978-3944669892, English/German, 558 pages, 2015, Germany

The voice is our primary communication “device” and musical instrument, a volatile but powerful medium of expression, that takes on plenty of different roles. It has been used in artworks (especially sound artworks) relatively rarely, and mostly in the performative domain. This book is a sort of “expanded catalogue” of the homonymous exhibition which took place at the Württembergischer Kunstverein in Stuttgart and the Total Museum of Contemporary Art in Seoul in 2012. Crucial elements themes emerge in the collection of texts, stemming from the curatorial decisions. Among these are vocal acousmatic qualities, the omnipresence of sounds (and the impossibility of shutting them out completely, as we can with our eyes with visuals), the intrinsic ephemerality, terrific influence and evocative power of vocals (as proven by siren mythology) wiretapping practices, the recorded voice of dead people and so on. A relevant political approach unfolds, effectively redefining the agency of the voice, carefully developed both in the exhibition and the texts, with philosophers being present both as artists and writers. The performative role of the voice shadows pure sonic characteristics and the contiguous universe of language. So as influential contemporary art theorist Bojana Kunst hints in her text, voices “deterritorialise” the body, in an extremely dynamic and political relationship, while also functioning as a potential tactical tool.

 

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