Herberger Day (Institute for Design and Arts)

 

Yesterday, October 11th, 2018, was the Herberger Institute’s second annual “Herberger Day”, which featured dozens of workshops hosted from faculty and students from different fields like painting, ceramics, music, dance, design, and acting. One of the best parts about this event is that Herberger students are given the opportunity to participate in workshops that may be completely outside their comfort zone, but broaden their perspective on the unlimited number of possibilities that the arts possess.

The Acoustic Ecology Lab hosted a workshop yesterday from 3-4 pm, titled “Listening and Creative Placemaking”, which featured a soundwalk led by Anne-Marie, a demonstration of our VR headsets led by Kyle and myself, and a poster presentation/discussion led by Jake. The goal of this workshop was to introduce people to the different ways that listening can make us more aware of our environment and help us to develop a deeper connection with ourselves, other people, and our planet.

We started the workshop with a short introduction from each member of the lab, and we swiftly shifted to an introduction to listening and a stationary listening exercise influenced by John Cage’s “4’33″”. Right off the bat, everyone in the audience was intrigued by how many sounds we were able to hear in the room we were in, including orchestral music sneaking its way through a wall to our right, a vehicle’s brakes making their way through the glass windows to our left, and the sounds of human movement reverberating in the concrete hallway outside of our room. One participant’s comments on the listening exercise included a remark on how the sounds coming from the hallway have him clues as to how large the hallway was and what kind of surfaces it was made of (tile and concrete). I thought this comment was particularly interesting because for many people, these types of clues are difficult to derive during someone’s first time deeply listening.

After the stationary listening exercise, we split our participants into two groups — one went with Anne-Marie on her preplanned soundwalk, and the other group stayed in the room that we were in and took turns remotely listening to different acoustic ecologies, via our VR headsets (two new Oculus Rifts and one with a Samsung phone). Everyone was highly impressed with our VR captures and expressed feelings of relaxation and calmness after using the headsets. After everyone had gotten time remotely listening and talking to Jake about our poster, we switched the groups and had the other half of our participants interact with the headsets. The results were almost the exact same for both groups — a feeling of excitement, calmness, and awe after each person returned to “reality”.

For our closing speech, Anne-Marie led a short recap of the different activities that everyone was able to experience and got a few more comments from the audience about what they learned about listening, soundwalking, and their thoughts on using virtual reality to remotely listen. Overall, the feedback was overwhelmingly positive, and many people were eager to learn more about what we do in the lab and how they could potentially get involved. I had some business cards with me for the Soundwalk program, and by the end of the event, I had none left! All-in-all, yesterday was yet another proudly successful day for the lab, and we are excited to continue onward.

 

 

Media Release – Listen(n) Project in National Park Week

Media Release: April 14, 2015

Listen(n) Project

Open your ears to the sonic environment during National Park Week

America’s largest celebration of national environmental heritage begins on April 18 with events and activities happening across 400 national parks.

Hosted by the National Park Foundation and National Parks Services, National Park Week celebrates the vibrant culture, rich history and iconic landscapes of National Parks across the country.

The National Park Week program features Arizona State University’s Listen(n) Project, which explores technologically innovative and interdisciplinary approaches to acoustic ecology in National Parks across America. During National Park Week, the Listen(n) Project team is hosting presentations and workshops that foster community-centered listening experiences in Joshua Tree National Park and Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Park in California. Conceived in 2013 by Arizona State University professor Garth Paine, the Listen(n) project examines how new approaches to listening increased awareness of the acoustic ecology can inspire environmental stewardship among local and global communities. The project has already gained significant international attention and has been featured at some of the world’s leading acoustic ecology and conservation events, including the 2014 IUCN World Parks Congress in Sydney, Australia and SxSW Eco in Austin, Texas.

Listen(n) engages local placemaking through deep listening and sound recording community workshops, providing local communities with the tools and skills to document the acoustic ecology of their local park. The Listen(n) created a user-friendly online database and portal for community members, researchers and artists to share their sonic experience of park environments globally. The project has formed diverse partnerships and promotes creative projects to be shared with larger communities.

Dr. Paine and visiting researcher Dr. Leah Barclay will lead field recording workshops and demonstrate the value of listening to the park environment through a series of public presentations during National Park Week. Workshop participants will have the opportunity to contribute to the Listen(n) online database and online community portal, which is a dynamic and inspiring model for soundscape presentation and digital archiving of sound, media art works and community storytelling.

Joshua Tree

Listening to Joshua Tree

The Listen(n) team will also contribute to the ‘Find Your Park’ campaign on FindYourPark.com. Launched April 1 by the National Park Service and the National Park Foundation, Find Your Park is a public awareness and education campaign celebrating the milestone centennial anniversary of the National Park Service in 2016 and setting the stage for its second century of service. ‘Find Your Park’ is also the theme for this year’s National Park Week. It is an exciting opportunity for the Listen(n) Project to engage in a national conversation about the value and future of America’s National Parks.

One of the crucial components of the Listen(n) Project has been the development of rich digital media environments that can be used to engage local and global communities including the elderly and disabled without access to these precious places. Given the current challenges of environmental degradation, the Listen(n) team has created novel virtual reality experiences (EcoRift) which facilitate remote embodied experiences of natural environments through sound to broaden discussion about the value of pristine, yet fragile ecosystems.

As the National Park Service turns 100 on August 25, 2016, it continues to foster new ideas to engage communities through recreation, conservation, and historic preservation programs. National Park Week offers programs that enable communities to protect, preserve and experience nature. The Listen(n) Project underscores the NPS vision by creatively exploring the rich sonic environments of parks. Assisted by Dr. Sabine Feisst and Dr. Daniel Gilfillan from the Humanities and Sciences, the Listen(n) team documents the parks’ acoustics and offers path-breaking virtual reality experiences of parks, responsive community listening workshops in parks and realizes music and art projects inspired by the sounds of parks with the goal of studying, protecting and preserving the parks’ acoustic ecology and building community capacity and environmental stewardship for the future.Follow the Listen(n) Project during National Park Week using the hashtag #ListenProject and #FindYourPark on social media platforms and on  www.ecolisten.org

10922518_985763691448911_7144597671277549567_n