The Politics Of Sound
to
Two Rivers Gallery 725 Canada Games Way, Prince George, British Columbia V2L 5T1

Marjie Crop Eared Wolf, "Niitsi’powahsin Secwepemctsín," 2021-2022
installation detail
The Politics Of Sound
Curated by Tyler J Stewart, with artworks by jamilah malika abu-bakare, Adam Basanta, Michèle Pearson Clarke, Marjie Crop Eared Wolf, Maskull Lasserre, Benny Nemer, and Jessica Thompson.
Artist Talk with Michèle Pearson Clarke
We invite you to join us on Thursday, March 10 at 7:30pm for a live presentation and Q&A with Michèle Pearson Clarke as she discusses her practice and the making of her video installation Suck Teeth, currently on view as a part of our exhibition The Politics of Sound.
Please arrive early as space is limited! Masks and vaccine passports required.
Is it possible that our ears can no longer hear? The Politics of Sound investigates the often overlooked (or more appropriately – silenced) role of sound within social relations of power. While sound has been used by those in power to intimidate and dominate, artists have also in turn used sound as a form of resistance against inequitable social structures.
The artworks in this exhibition expand the understanding of how sound has varying material effects within society, based on historical and social patterns of exclusion, cultural erasure and destruction. Important questions are brought up here, such as who gets to speak and who is silenced? For what reasons? What might we do to remix these societal ‘sound structures’ and create more equitable auralities? In an ocular-centric society, how can we emphasize the importance of listening to better inform and enrich the human experience?
This group exhibition collectively demonstrates the potential of sound to bring communities together, rather than sonically divide them. By exploring the potential of sound-based art to create new meanings and understandings in relation to social issues, these artworks create a deeper appreciation for the psychological experience of listening – over the physical act of hearing. By making this spectrum of sonic relations more audible, The Politics of Sound challenges visitors to question their own location within the soundscape and what responsibilities that position might ask of them.
Info
