Glasgow International Festival of Contemporary Art

Live Audio Essays

figure with a microphone in front of a screen showing a building and a tree
A dark photograph with a person dimly lit, they are stood at a desk which is lit by orange and green lights.
A dark photograph with a two people dimly lit, they are sitting at two desks lit by orange and green lights.
two people stood next to each other behind a desk. One is speaking into a microphone.
there are two people stood in front of a desk with laptops. behind them is a screen with the image of a croc shoe on top of tape reel. in front of them is a re car door framed by plywood and surrounded by microphones
An audience viewed from behind in The Barrowland Ballroom

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Describing himself as an audio investigator, Lawrence Abu Hamdan weaves together urgent political narratives that pivot around acoustic experience and sonic memory. Live Audio Essays presents three key performance works by Lawrence, where sound and politics intersect. Two of the three performances have never previously been shown in the UK.

Air Pressure, 2021, A Thousand White Plastic Chairs, 2020, and After SFX, 2018, will each be performed for one night only, each in a different music venue. These performances, delivered in the form of a monologue or live audio essay, present Lawrence’s research and investigative analysis, which is centred around forensic listening, auditory evidence, and the ear-witness as political and legal testimony. Performances feature live percussion, filmed footage and sound design with audio conditions enhanced to support careful listening, a conceptual and political tool for the artist.

The performances present narratives and testimonies that detail violence, oppression, and aggression, offering strategies for political critique and action. Air Pressure draws on research conducted between May 2020-21 into the aerial soundscape of Lebanon, documenting 22,111 instances of Israeli fighter jets and drones in Lebanese airspace. A Thousand White Plastic Chairs draws its scenography from translation techniques deployed during the Nuremberg trials (1945-46) with Lawrence re-performing the asymmetry between technological prowess and the limits of cognitive processing. After SFX is prompted by Lawrence’s investigations into crimes that are heard but not seen.

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