Watching, listening, writing to the hernoise archive
Watching the video interview with Christina Kubisch on Hernoise, I am reminded again of the importance of this multi-faceted and growing archive for contemporary research in sound, gender and technology. I have read quite a bit about Kubisch in the past, but the video and its informal conversational tone gives access to her thinking and work in a new way, providing more context, letting me see and hear her reactions to questions. She talks about how she came to her method of working with magnetic induction, and her interest in letting audiences construct their own sonic experience using technology that she and her team had developed to make electrical signals audible. I think this aspect of Kubisch’s work is very important. On an electrical walk, the audience really participates in the creation of their sonic experience. I did such a walk in Montreal several years ago. I was not asked to follow a set route or constructed narrative, as I might with a sited audio walk or listening guide. Instead, Kubisch provides her walkers with a technology (special headphones) and a map with points of sonic-electrical interest, facilitating an exploration of the place. Then, as a listener I am left to my own devices, and wander through the city, where the familiar becomes unfamiliar, and electrical signals become audible all around. At the end, I am left with a conscious sense of connections between kinds of power made audible, thinking viscerally about how nodes of financial power (such as banks) and institutional power (like government buildings and libraries) are surrounded by dense walls of invisible (and usually inaudible) electrical power. Questions about the social, political and health effects of these power systems and hotspots persist and are brought to the surface by this work. The Goethe Institut in Montreal retains two sets of electrical walk headphones that continue to be signed out by interested audiences, an unusual persistence of artistically-inspired practice through time.