Hearing Program
Hearing Program
Hearing Program
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) machines are lauded by medical professionals, patients, and
others for their non-invasive capacity to produce images of soft tissue, organs, bones, and virtually
all other internal structures of the body. For subjects inhabiting the ill or diseased body, this capacity to provide visual accounts of abnormal or diseased tissue is woven into both the spectacular
event of the medical diagnosis, as well as the more quotidian dimensions of managing and treating
chronic illness. For anyone who inhabits the enclosed MRIwhich may last anywhere from ten minutes or over two hours at a timethere exists a sonic element. The MRIs vibrating magnetic, gradient
coils with rapid, pulsing electricity come together to produce a cacophony of loud, jarring noises.
Using these MRI noises, in this performance I explore the ways in which MRIs introduce rhythms of
time not only by virtue of its noise, but by way of its silences in between. What might MRI noises do
for the patients that inhabit them? How might the silent intervals spliced with the harshness of MRI
noises magnify the more subtle, everyday, often taken-for-granted bodily sounds, such as a heartbeat or a breath? What else resonates beyond the resonance in Magnetic Resonance Imaging?
Please join us after the performances for refreshments and a roundtable critique
in the performance studies seminar room.
rusted, and the juggernaut of Alabama vegetation has reclaimed every crevice. A defining element of Birminghams skyline and a favorite destination for photographers, Sloss is a visual landmark every local child
could draw. Far fewer would recognize its singular soundscape. My productions were unavoidably defined
and hamperedby this soundscape. In MUSE:Remix, I bookend excerpts from my archive with newly captured
audio of each scenes location, foregrounding the inescapable and often subsuming sonic elements performance places embed. By using various modes of playback, I interrogate the temporal filters and decay that
distance us from an aural memory of canonical text. In this piece, I rely on remix practices to demonstrate
how sonically powerful sites can disrupt the cultural authority of Shakespeares familiar lines. When location
imposes its own intractable performance soundtrack, the audience must engage active listening to decode
language already obscured by the evolution of idiom, or what was background hum will become a roar.