Documents
-
- Full Text
- under embargo until 2025-04-11
-
- Download
- Title Pages_Contents
- open access
-
- Download
- Introduction
- open access
-
- Chapter 1
- under embargo until 2025-04-11
-
- Chapter 2
- under embargo until 2025-04-11
-
- Conclusion
- under embargo until 2025-04-11
-
- Download
- References
- open access
-
- Download
- Summary in English
- open access
-
- Download
- Summary in Dutch
- open access
-
- Download
- Acknowledgements_Curriculum Vitae
- open access
-
- Download
- Propositions
- open access
In Collections
This item can be found in the following collections:
Mutable audible: an operative ontology of the sound image
Gabriel Paiuk’s project Mutable Audible investigates how that which is heard – the audible – is formed as inherent to material, collective and technical circumstances. The audible is conceived as not exclusively bound to the private realm of the mind or the will of the individual listener, but as dependent on the diverse operations that inform how a sensorial engagement with sound takes place.
To account for the mutable character of the audible, Paiuk postulates a novel concept of sound image built upon the work of the French philosopher Gilbert Simondon. This notion is unhinged from previous uses of the term, namely those that define it as a visual surrogate or a mental representation. Rather, the image is conceived as a node in a cycle of functions that articulate a metastable relationship between sensing agent and milieu. The result of this reconsideration is twofold. On the one hand, the sound image is postulated as a tool to address the audible as a variable locus...
Show moreGabriel Paiuk’s project Mutable Audible investigates how that which is heard – the audible – is formed as inherent to material, collective and technical circumstances. The audible is conceived as not exclusively bound to the private realm of the mind or the will of the individual listener, but as dependent on the diverse operations that inform how a sensorial engagement with sound takes place.
To account for the mutable character of the audible, Paiuk postulates a novel concept of sound image built upon the work of the French philosopher Gilbert Simondon. This notion is unhinged from previous uses of the term, namely those that define it as a visual surrogate or a mental representation. Rather, the image is conceived as a node in a cycle of functions that articulate a metastable relationship between sensing agent and milieu. The result of this reconsideration is twofold. On the one hand, the sound image is postulated as a tool to address the audible as a variable locus of engagement with the world. On the other, it unsettles assumptions that keep the image anchored to its traditional visual-centric forms and techniques and drives its transformation to encompass the realm of sound. The variable form in which the audible is produced is explored across four artistic works which constitute the experimental backbone of the dissertation.
- All authors
- Paiuk, G.
- Supervisor
- Cobussen, M.; Kursell, J.
- Co-supervisor
- Ablinger, P.
- Committee
- Ochoa Gautier, A.M.; Haarmann, A.; Malaspina, C.; Dietz, B.
- Qualification
- Doctor (dr.)
- Awarding Institution
- Academy of Creative and Performing Arts (ACPA), Faculty of Humanities, Leiden University
- Date
- 2023-10-11