Second issue of the contemporary art journal about sound, devoted to the complex relationships between visual and sound forms, both in contemporary art and history,
around the problematics of voice and oralness.
Featuring: monographs (Anthony McCall,
Vittorio Santoro, Loreto Troncoso Martinez,
Benjamin Seror,
Anna Barham), analysis (
Radiotopia by Manuel Cirauqui,
From verbivoco-visual poetry to the spatialization of words by Audrey Illouz,
An evening of poetry and other inspiring speeches by
Franck Leibovici), interview with
Mathieu Copeland,
Focus on
Artur Zmijewski, interventions (
Marcelline Delbecq, Christian Alandete)...
Volume –
What You See Is What You Hear is the first magazine devoted to
sound issues in art, and to the complex relationships between visual and sound forms, both in contemporary art and history.
Volume is neither a musical magazine, nor a magazine about sound art; rather, it sees sound from the angle of
the visual arts.
The history of relations between sound and art is not recent, but the past few years have seen
many more works, exhibitions, publications and other events whose aesthetic and theoretical content attests to a
growing interest in this medium, and the various ways it is used. Through a broad range of critical and artistic
contributions, it is
Volume's intent to represent a platform observing and analyzing this dynamic, while at the
same time being sure to re-position it within a historical perspective.
The seven issues published between 2010 and 2013 now constitute a concluded series.