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Sternberg Press / Sandberg Series

Found in Art
Reinventing Daily Life by edited by Martijn de Rijk and Thomas Spijkerman
Master of Voice by edited by Lisette Smits

Sternberg Press / Sandberg Series : Titles in Order

Book 6
A collection that looks at the role and use of the human and nonhuman voice in art.

The (non)human voice has always been part of modern art, notably within performance art, sound art, and conceptual art. However, the Master of Voice graduate program mutates from this history, examining the voice as a unique “discipline.” The focus is on the (non) human voice, as a means to an end or an end in itself, within artistic practice. A special orientation of the Master of Voice curriculum, co-developed with a team of artists with a longstanding interest in the (non)human voice, is the voice in relation to technology and gender. This book captures a two-year-long period of research–of thinking, talking, sharing, learning, making, acting, and creating by students and teachers, artists, and other practitioners–to find possible answers and approaches to the question of the voice and its prominent role in our postindustrial society.

Contributors

Tyler Coburn, Angelo Custódio, Thom Driver, Paul Elliman, Amelia Groom, Miyuki Inoue, Danae Io, Jamila Johnson-Small, Bin Koh, Snejanka Mihaylova, Maria Montesi, MPA, Natasha Papadopoulou, Duncan Robertson, Marnie Slater, Lisette Smits, Eva Šusová, Cécile Tafanelli, Mavi Veloso, Geo Wyeth
Book 5
On the possibility to merge art and life, fiction and reality, and on the importance of this process for the future of artistic practice.

Does art possess the power to cause structural and meaningful changes in daily life? How can we inject our daily reality with the estranging, binding, and reflective qualities of theater, performance art, and the visual arts? Using the artist’s desire to escape institutional space as a point of departure, the temporary master Reinventing Daily Life investigated the implications, the possibilities, and the limits of daily life as inspiration, as a place for presentation, and as a central material. This publication marks the completion and distillation of this inquiry. By means of a critical essay, correspondence with kindred spirits from the field, and visual impressions of the alumni’s work, this book reflects on the possibility to merge art and life, fiction and reality, and on the importance of this process for the future of artistic practice.

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