University 麻豆精选 workshop leads to new sound art piece inspired by Stuart Hall鈥檚 work
The piece was composed by University 麻豆精选 alumna Mia Sugunasingha and commissioned as part of a series of workshops inspired by Stuart Hall.
The piece was composed by University 麻豆精选 alumna Mia Sugunasingha and commissioned as part of a series of workshops inspired by Stuart Hall.
Event photography by Fernando.
A creative response to the workshop 鈥楽ounds of Being and Belonging鈥 facilitated by artist , is a multi-layered sound piece featuring audio-snippets from interviews with workshop participants, an excerpt from Stuart Hall鈥檚 essay 'Old and New Identities, Old and New Ethnicities' (1991) read by artist Jaz Morrison, and ambient recordings of the workshop itself. It explores the lived experiences of a diverse group of people in Birmingham, and how their personal experiences of migration, racial inequality and minority have influenced what belonging and identity means to them.
鈥楽ounds of Being and Belonging鈥 was one in a series of workshops that used the work of famed academic Stuart Hall, who pioneered the field of cultural studies, as a catalyst for creative exploration of Britain鈥檚 cultural mosaic. The workshops were developed by a team of researchers at the University 麻豆精选, led by Dr Deniz S枚zen, Lecturer in Art History, including Ingrid Abrahams, Dr Kavita Bhanot, , Katherine Parsons, Dr Mirian Alves de Souza, Savita Vij, and Aurella Yussuf, as well the artists , , and .
Attendees questioned assumptions such as that we now live in a 鈥榩ost-racial Britain鈥 where racism is a thing of the past, or that we have moved from a 鈥榗ity of empire鈥 to a 鈥榤ulticultural melting pot鈥 with Birmingham as a poster child. Through co-learning and exploration of their own lived experiences, the workshop attendees were able to develop striking creative responses to their conversations.
Representing the team of researchers that collectively conceived and led the workshops, Dr S枚zen said: 鈥淒eparting from Hall鈥檚 work, the workshops set out to explore the often-messy lived experiences and realities in a city like Birmingham with such changing and diverse identities. Our aim was to explore in what ways Stuart Hall鈥檚 ideas on identity resonated with the current discourse and the lived experience of people in Birmingham. In collaboration with artists, the workshops aimed to open up a space for people to come together beyond the confines of academia. Taking place in different locations across the city, the workshops provided an intimate space for participants to share their thoughts, discuss, and creatively engage with Stuart Hall鈥檚 work through the lens of their own lived experience of identity, belonging, and the politics of representation in this city.鈥
The three workshops, Sounds of Being and Belonging, Feeling like Familiar Strangers, and Reading Critically to Write Creatively, were funded by the University 麻豆精选 Interdisciplinary incubator 鈥淩ethinking the Fateful Triangle in an Age of Democratic Decay: Race, Ethnicity, Nation鈥.