Bachelor’s Thesis, Institute of Sonology, The Hague
Full paper (pdf)
Weaving a thread of inspiration from experimental theatre practices, her current research relates to dramatically unfolding space in electroacoustic music and the sonic relationship between reality and fiction. Focusing on the perceptual tensions and the role memory plays in the listening process, she investigates the conditions of emerging active imagination, formulated through the notions of sonic fiction, and creates often surreal fictional realms.
Alongside this, a strain of her research concerns how the metaphor of ruins can be translated to sound. A ruin is an intriguing concept in the context of musical form in how it assimilates in relation to time structures; what it suggests about the presence and materiality of sounds. The ruinous as an embodiment of the musical aesthetics of form and formlessness, collapsing spaces and degrading materials, and non-linear time narratives where the past, present, and future of sounds are interwoven. Bearing many complex perceptual tangencies, sonic ruins unite and direct her thought as a material metaphor, a speculative strategy for working with sound.
What does it mean to compose ruins?
How can an architectural ruin become a metaphor for a sonic material?
Part of this artistic research are the two pieces Sarid (2022) and Al Niente. A Song From a Past Time I-III (2023-2024).