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Listening on Display
Exhibiting Sounding Artworks, 1960s to the Present
Listening on Display
Exhibiting Sounding Artworks, 1960s to the Present
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Description
Listening on Display provides an empirical investigation of the historically, culturally, and socially contingent ways in which artists, curators, and visitors relate to sounds in contemporary art exhibitions.
Sounding artworks have appeared regularly in contemporary art exhibitions since the 1960s,
yet scholars of art history, musicology, sound studies, and museum studies have long noted
the experiential difficulties this development poses. They describe how sounds challenge the
sensory hierarchy of the museum, how they disrupt the venerable silence of the white cube,
or how they drown in the ambient noise of galleries.
This book explores the listening experiences of artists, visitors, curators, and technicians
in more than twenty exhibitions that have taken place at contemporary art museums,
alternative art spaces, and other venues in Germany and the United States since the 1960s.
Through archival research, visitor book analysis, interviews, and observations drawing on
sensory ethnography, Semmerling brings together their ideas and ideals about aesthetic
ambitions, sensory abilities, cultural conventions, and technological standards. In doing so, this
book lays the groundwork for rethinking sound in exhibition spaces.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Listening on Display
1. Studying Exhibitions with Sounding Artworks: Methodological Reflections
2. The Exhibition as Social Ritual: How to Do Things with Sound
3. The Exhibition as Institutional Convention: Rehearsing Sensory Repertoires
4. The Exhibition as Taskscape: Negotiations of Attention
Conclusions: Beyond Noisy White Cubes and Silent Black Boxes
Appendix: Exhibition Overview
Bibliography
Index
Product details
| Published | 05 Feb 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 232 |
| ISBN | 9798765136249 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Sound exhibited in art galleries demands scholarly attention. Linnea Semmerling listens to others' listening-interviewing curators and observing visitors across twenty exhibitions since the 1960s. This approach transforms our understanding of sound in art galleries, making a vital scholarly contribution.
Caleb Kelly, Associate Professor of Media Art Theory, UNSW School of Art & Design, Australia
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Sounds are ephemeral, energetic and resistant to containment. How is it possible to exhibit them? This book explores the burgeoning role of listening in exhibitions at contemporary art museums since the 1960s, the ingenious techniques used by artists and curators to stage sounding artworks, and the response of visitors – some very attuned and others who tune out. Linnea Semmerling is a brilliant archival researcher and sensory ethnographer, hence the perfect guide for this auditory odyssey. Listening on Display is a soundmark contribution to the sensory studies and multisensory museology literature.
David Howes, author of The Sensory Studies Manifesto (2022)
ONLINE RESOURCES
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