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Art of Noises

Joseph Young is an artist working in spatial audio & performance creating site-specific works, gallery and museum installations, performances, films and publications. He is based between Brighton, Dublin  & Berlin. A specialist in binaural field recording techniques, Joseph has exhibited and performed at Tate Britain, Tate Modern, Towner Art Gallery, Jerwood Hastings, Pallant House, V&A…

gallery

Collection · 9 items

museum

Collection · 6 items

Publications

Collection · 4 items

Tate Modern

Collection · 3 items

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walkingevent

Open afternoon of the exhibition: artist who walk

Open afternoon of the exhibition: The walks you can participate in and the various presentations you can attend are coordinated in terms of time and duration. Thus, as a visitor, you can participate in several activities on that afternoon.

Roelant Meijer
Sound walk

Esercizio Pratico di Meraviglia e Sorpresa

This sound walk, called “Practical Exercise Of Wonder And Surprise – Silence And Listening,” invites people to slow down and really tune in to the sensory world around them.

M. Cristina Marras
Walking piece

Man Walking Down the Side of a Building

“Man Walking Down the Side of a Building” was first performed in New York in 1970. A man descended the side of a building at 80 Wooster Street, and is part of a series called ‘Equipment Pieces’, drawing attention to the simple act of walking in an unnatural scenario.

Trisha Brown
Walking piece

A Place to Return To

A solo exhibition based on the artists experience of walking around the whole of Britain through a large scale collage painted, pasted and drawn on the gallery walls, geographical drawings and the recreation of her basecamp in paper.

Daniella Turbin

lonning, lonnin

Cumbrian dialect term for ‘lane’ – but a quite specific lane. Lonnings are usually about half a mile long, low level and often with a farm at the end. Many have specific names known only to the local villagers. Hence, Bluebottle Lonning, Lovers Lonning, Fat Lonning, Thin Lonning, Squeezy Gut Lonning or Dynamite Lonning. In the north-east the spelling is lonnin and seems to refer more to an alley than a country lane. The Scottish equivalent is ‘loan’.

Added by Alan Cleaver
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