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10:00 PM-11:00 PM

Nele Möller

Listening #3|Mix and Reading

© Maik Gräf © Maik Gräf

© Maik Gräf © Maik Gräf

Nele Möller is an artist working primarily in sound, performance and writing. Her research-based practice focuses on acoustic ecologies, environmental histories, and intersubjective relations between humans and more-than-humans. For Listening Other·Wise, Möller will further develop and expand the concept of collective, slow, and long-durational listening to explore questions of simultaneities and entanglements of different places. Central to the concept are the relationships between various states of consciousness and how they influence our listening response-abilities. Together with Möller, we will get an insightful experience of place-specific (con)texts and stories accompanied by a livestream from the Thuringian Forest.

About

Nele is a Brussels-based artist currently working towards a PhD in the Arts at KU Leuven and LUCA Brussels. Her research project, The Forest Echoes Back, oscillates around the Thuringian Forest in Germany, which is severely impacted by monoculture plantings, climate change, and bark beetle outbreaks, exploring how to retrace and react to these ongoing changes using field recording, live audio streaming, listening, and mimicry as the central methodologies.
 

Agenda

  • Introduction

    Listening #1 | Nele Möller on the Forest Stream Research Project

  • Loré Lixenberg

    Listening #2 | Vocal Performance

  • Nele Möller

    Listening #3 | Mix and Reading

  • Mort Drew

    Listening #4 | Electronic Music Performance

  • Sharon Stewart

    Listening #5 | Deep Listening Exercise

  • Sleeping Time

    Listening #6 | Locus Sonus

  • Roberta Miss

    Listening #7 | Awakening Mix

  • Karen Willems

    Listening #8 | Jazz Performance

  • Round Table

    Listening #9 | Discussion

  • Live Streams

    Listening#10 | Locus Sonus

  • Nina Emge

    Listening #11 | Lecture Performance

  • Leah Bassel

    Listening #12 | Lecture

  • Closing Discussion

    Listening #13 | Reflections on the program