Copyright
Rights of the articles on No Man’s Land are reserved to the original authors or media. No Man’s Land is authorized to reproduce and distribute the articles freely. Users may distribute the articles on No Man’s Land accordingly to the above terms of use, and shall mark the author, and provide a link to the article on No Man’s Land .
「數位荒原」網站上文章之著作權由原發表人或媒體所有,原發表人(媒體)同意授權本站可自由重製及公開散佈該文章。使用者得按此原則自由分享本站收錄之文章,且註明作者姓名、轉載出處「數位荒原」與網頁的直接連結。
Contact
Please fill out your information to contact No Man’s Land .
The information you supply will only be used by No Man’s Land .




Subscribe No Man's Land
Please fill out your email to get the latest from No Man’s Land .
The information you supply will only be used by No Man’s Land .
Unsubscribe No Man’s Land
ISSUE 44 : Non-Intentional Sound
Sheryl Cheung: Cosmopolitics in Sound
聲音裡的宇宙政治
March 15th, 2020Type: Sound Scene
Author: 張欣 Editor: Rikey Tenn
Quote From: lololol.net
Note: Sheryl Cheung experiments with the idea of the body as an instrument that is continually played by affects. Like an open, metabolic body, her sound palette is vulnerable and harsh at the same time. Sheryl works between experimental music, abstract scoring and writing to explore a materialist understanding of power, emotion and moral order. Her recent research focuses on sound and medicine through the perspective of Chinese ontology. Sheryl has held supported residencies, workshops and research projects in China, UK, Thailand, Korea and Taiwan. Her work, performances and collaborative projects have been shown around the word. Sheryl is a co-founder of lololol.net, an art project that is currently exploring Taoist-informed mind and body technologies.
Sheryl Cheung, "Clear Waters, Green Mountains, Mountains of Gold and Silver: Script #2", 2019

Consider harnessing sound as a way of interpreting the universe, relationships, changes, and the here and now; a process wherein an exploration of cosmopolitics is implicit; a sublimation technique to navigate between the form and essence of all things. More specifically, in my practice I work with a kind of inner sound, a sonic feedback of the animated world, as a medium to theorize and practice a subjective view of the cosmos and morality.

Growing up emotionally affiliated with many cultures, locations and communities, active listening became a way to deepen my awareness of the multi-worlds, to negotiate between the noise of nature (death, chaos, destruction) and noise of cultures (dogma, hierarchy and specialization)–not as binaries but as parts of a greater malleable whole–that which we call the noise of modernity.

Our sense of belonging is becoming increasingly unstable in a rapidly changing world. The earth is in crisis, digital consciousness is coming, and global, hegemonic knowledge systems have lost their benevolent flair. This is a time to extend contemporary narratives beyond the human centric world that endlessly cycles through ideologies, “as if the evolution of ideas about the cosmos [has become] even more important than the truth about it,” writes historian Remi Brague. Relieve the pressures of usefulness and gravitational pull.

In this episode I trespass through transhumanist desires with Taoist (non-humanist) intuition, to delve into the politics of human and non-human forms, to maintain a holistic view that deters one from traps of enchantment. To harness a way of embodiment that engages with an internal network of life and thereby affectively philosophize; to follow a desire to imagine, to interpret and influence the noise of the future (utility, progress, speed).

Sheryl Cheung, "Clear Waters, Green Mountains, Mountains of Gold and Silver" at Long March Space", Beijing, 2019

Let us begin with a general mythology of sound. Imagine the most elemental technology in the world–the essence of life–the animating power that runs through all living things. This power is an intangible material with universal potential that suggests a shared disposition between all that appears to be separate. Like wind, it flows through different internal and external worlds, making the inner and outer one of the same. The ability for this power to connect different entities, spaces, and time gives it a narrating quality, bringing together different relations, changes and patterns to assemble a perspective of the world that differs from histories based on externality.

17th Century Dutch philosopher Spinoza speaks of the power of life as a musical instrument that produces melodic variations with a vast range of dynamics determined by affects, or passions of the mind. Because affects are not determined by the self alone, but induced by various conditions that influence one’s experiential state, the melody of one’s life force is not an expression of free will, but a series of responses to a greater network of influences. The Taoist sage Lao Tzu shares a similar view of agency by positing that all natural forces, including man, follow the laws of nature (天道). And so, when a strong gust of wind howls like a beast, does its force intend aggression, or an impartial demonstration of a greater cosmic order? Here the concepts of affect, power, and world order seem to lean on interpretations of plasticity.

Sheryl Cheung, "Communion with the Wind", 2017

One’s power in the cosmic order is intricately connected to the conditions of mind and body. In Taoist practices, the animating power of life, which they call “qi“, is fostered according to the characteristics of nature: how plants grow, animals move, the order of the seasons. Based on these qualities, practitioners follow certain daily methods to gather, mobilize, replenish energy of a human body and connect with the qi of its surroundings. A visualization of this process can be found in The “Inner Scripture,” an imaginative Taoist diagram about manipulating energy; the diagram depicts the human interior as a natural landscape of fields and agrarian labor; qi flows with the collective efforts of this complex system. Here the human body is a space for energy cultivation, and the good condition of energy is portrayed through towering mountains and streaming rivers. While this immersive, sensory experience evokes a busy, vibrant soundscape, Taoist practitioners strive for an aural experience that goes beyond mechanical hearing, in order to reach towards the soundless sound of truth:

Listen to [the way] but you cannot hear it
Its name is “Soundless”

This pursuit of the material sound resonates with Pierre Schaeffer’s musique concrète proposed in the mid 1900s, which sought to develop a kind of music emancipated from the cultural structures of his time. In search for liberated sound, Schaeffer took on the physical world as a general instrument unbounded by traditional tools and fixed understandings of music theory. Music making involves more than technicalities of craft, or the understanding of science, said Schaeffer, it also requires a critical determination of “the nature of the music which the choice of certain musical objects implies.” He emphasizes on the implicit, a searching of meaning within the entwined.

Sheryl Cheung, "Earth Crust Quake", 2018; from my ongoing research project "Anthem Boy" (tentative title, 2013-)

In my piece “Earth Crust Quake,” I abstracted the form of sound until form is no longer and only matter remains (無), then experimented with matter in a nonlinear process (有). Like qi that runs through the “Inner Scripture”–musique concrète is a sounding of a general substance, a processing of physical representation to excavate the internal rhythms in the essence of sound.

The state of cohabitation as portrayed in the “Inner Scripture” raises questions about shared embodiment between different life forms. One of the highest achievements of a Taoist practitioner is to, by way of connecting by qi, attain unity between heaven, earth and man (天人合一). With conscious engagement oneself and the world, a transbody becomes possible between different life forms. Spinoza zooms in for a more specific look at this unity by speaking of a mixture of bodies. “Affectio” is a mixture of two bodies, one body which is said to act on another, and the other receives the trace of the first.

Sheryl Cheung, "Moon Tides," performance excerpt, 2017

The idea of transbody is explored in “Moon Tides I”, a ritualistic performance in which a plant and a human are united in a shared narrative of vulnerability and weakness. Internal sounds from the human and plant, such as breathing, digestion, breaking bones and branches and electromagnetic bio-feedback are used in a musical experience to create one sonic field of bio-rhythms.

In this performance, the narrative of vulnerability and sadness reflects upon a general correlation between power and emotions. How does the energy of life embody a certain affective politics based on our vision of life affirming goodnesses? According to Spinoza, Joy and sadness are considered two poles of the emotional scale that determine the range of the vital melodic line; joy increases one’s power to act and persist in life; sadness diminishes one’s level of power.

While this power scale can be useful as a general guideline for self-orientation, it is also beneficial to consider the world beyond the positive–as a boundless space that stretches limitlessly towards all directions. Where there is no aesthetic judgment of either direction, but an ability to maneuver with the tides and to cultivate one’s instrument in the ever-changing states. From this perspective, weakness is negatively affirming and thereby empowering: In the research of Indian scientist Jagdish Chandra Bose, the right amount of stimulation (shock) on a plant can increase internal flow of sap and fuel growth in certain developing areas. This enhanced inner mobility suggests a connection between weakness and growth, driven by biological instincts to heal, to bloom and prosper in life. In Bose’s studies, we see a perseverance that goes beyond resilience by responding affirmatively to a call for inner power.

Sheryl Cheung

To be able to maneuver in the positive and negative requires a particular state of mind and body that allows one to flexibly respond to changing states of disposition. Despite our limited agency, constrained by social, environmental, emotional and other factors, this project is an attempt to propose an attitude and practice, through the medium of sound, to navigate the constant flux of the universe.

See Also
Cosmopolitics in Sound ,Sheryl Cheung