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Thursday, June 25, 2026 |
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| Len Lye Centre celebrates 10th anniversary with major two-part sound exhibition |
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Simon Ingram, Vibrating World: Rotokare Forest, 39.45254˚ S, 174.41727 ˚ E, 2026. Installation view, Direct Bodily Empathy Sound, Signal, Feedback., Govett-Brewster Art Gallery, New Plymouth, New Zealand, 2026. Two-channel video, surround sound, duration variable. © and courtesy of the artist and Gow Langsford Gallery. Supported by Chartwell Collection, and Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland. Image: Bryan James.
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NEW PLYMOUTH.- Direct Bodily EmpathySound, Signal, Feedback explores sound as a material force of consequence in the world. Deep listeningto audible currents and felt vibrations, sirens and noiseis explored by artists as a means of knowledge building and a tool for critically engaging with a planet in crisis.
Spanning the Len Lye Centre, Aotearoa and international artists and collectives examine sonic relationalities and the politics of sound through a range of approaches. These include acoustic ecologies, where sound becomes a speculative tool for sensing and indexing biodiversity and climate volatility; practices of ear witnessing, where audio material acts as legal evidence towards truth-telling and social justice; and the deployment of sound as a decolonial force, where musical composition unsettles acoustic histories of field recording and the archive, while affirming Indigenous ways of being and knowing.
Staging sonic encounters, artists harness more-than-human co-composers, such as the wind, decomposing fruit, and native birdsong, to amplify the voices of weather systems, sonify carbon flows, and attune with the dawn chorus. Others compose warning sirens as harbingers of ecological feedback loops, or turn up the volume on ancestral rhythms to live by.
Through sound installations and sculptural assemblages, field recordings and experimental films, musical composition and archival interventions, lecture performances and deep-listening experiences, the work in Sound, Signal, Feedback asks, What does a healthy ecosystem sound like? How can sound act as a decolonial gesture? What are the techno-politics of machine listening? What sirens and warnings are needed to survive the future?
If sound can enter the body as waves in ways that other artforms cannot, what kinds of world-making potentialities does vibration have to shift matter and change our social realities? What, can sound do?
Direct Bodily Empathy is a two-part exhibition curated to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the Len Lye Centre. The exhibitions title pays homage to Len Lyes notion of bodily empathy, a term that signals sensory attunement, and the transfer of elemental energies. While part one, Sensing Sound, amplified artists intentions through sonic structures, resonant objects, and shared vibration, Sound, Signal, Feedback asks us to consider material sound as a transmitter of meaning and an input for action.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a major publication with Perimeter Editions, Melbourne, released in late 2026, and an expanded suite of public programmes across June 2728.
Artists: Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Andrew Faleatua + Stroma, Simon Ingram, Len Lye, Machine Listening, Yuko Mohri, Aura Satz, Rachel Shearer, Weather Cry, YoungEun Kim.
Curator: Anna Briers
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