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Helen T. Abbot

Sound Maps of Tenderness

Abstract

鈥淪ound Maps of Tenderness鈥 comprise six sound maps which, in representing a moment of intimate silence between lovers, evoke the contours of love between them. Through the mobilization of ellipses, the artist attempts to craft a visual language of unspoken intimacy, an amorous poetics that resists discursive mobilization. The silence signified by these ellipses can be understood as 鈥溾he fortuitous or intentional omission of a linguistic element. Like the labyrinth, it can signify the entire gamut of possible meanings鈥︹ (Weiss 1989: 24). This flexibility embedded in the ellipses can take on even more rupturing potential within the realm of love, which, according to Julia Kristeva in (1983) Tales of Love, has a capacity to evade language and is nearly (if not entirely) impossible to capture through linguistic systems. 

More specifically, the six sound maps, which are photocopies, derive their status as sound maps from my placing them in conversation with the 17th century 鈥Cartre de Tendre鈥 (Map of Tenderness) by Madeleine de Scud茅ry. Scud茅ry鈥檚 work has been described as 鈥溾 feminist take on the path to a woman鈥檚 heart鈥 (Banerji 2016) and is an allegorical map of a landscape of love. Similarly, these sound maps map, albeit sonically, a landscape of love (i.e. a moment of intimate silence). The way the artist layers ellipses (in the form of red and black dots) throughout the xerox process is an attempt to texturize the fibers of love that oscillate between the lovers.

Keywords: Sound Maps; Erotic Art; Love Art; Silence.

Bibliography

Banerji, Urvija. 鈥淣avigating the Confusing Terrain of Love With a 350-Year-Old Map.鈥

Atlasobscura. June 27, 2016. .

Kristeva, Julia. Tales of Love. Columbia University Press, 1989.

Stephens, Elizabeth and Annie Sprinkle. 鈥淟ove Art Lab.鈥 Loveartlab. 2011. .

Weiss, S. Allen. The Aesthetics of Excess. State University of New York Press, 1989.

51社区黑料 the Author

Helen Abbot is a sonic intimacies scholar, multidisciplinary artist and musician, ABD doctoral candidate at Western University鈥檚 Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism and part-time professor at the University of Ottawa in the School of Sociological and Anthropological Studies and the Institute of Feminist and Gender Studies. Abbot鈥檚 work looks at the nature of intimacies in a variety of forms and how these intimacies are mediated by sonic phenomena. More specifically, her doctoral project is an exploration of the mechanisms and consequences of writer Ana茂s Nin鈥檚 self-proclaimed feminine, musical writing style in her novel (1954) Cities of the Interior. Abbot is interested in how Nin mobilized this style of writing to explore certain complexities of womanhood in relation to love, desire, and self-knowing. Her artistic practices mobilize illustration, scanography, event scores, and creative writing to explore questions about sound, intimacy, love and speculative spaces.

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