Hannah Wallis

Hannah Wallis is a performance and sound artist based in the Midlands. She is a founding director of the Dyad Creative group dedicated to the organisation and production of artistic endeavours, and the management behind it. Wallis is bilateral deaf, meaning she can only listen from her right ear. This has moulded Hannahs work, being in some cases a barrier toward sonic objects. In the visiting practitioner lecture, she explained how she has used different hearing aids across time and this has forced her to learn how to listen with each different hearing apparatus.

Currently she works as a curator for the Wysing Arts Centre, with a particular focus in helping people with hearing disabilities. Exploring cognitive ways to support deaf people through the art medium. In these workshops and exhibitions, Wallis has explored the concept of accessibility and the aesthetics revolving with it, specially revolving the management and administration of the practises where the medium relies.

The video above is one of the events the Dyad creative has done. Interconnection between mediums was one of the key elements of the event, this is used as great resource to make art accessible. For example if a sound installation is taking place, by combining it with a non sonic medium, impaired audiences can enjoy or address a piece through another medium.

Ocularcentrism

A perceptual and epistemological bias ranking vision over other senses in Western Culture (Oxford Reference). In art this bias creates a hierarchy between different aesthetically mediums, affecting the medium context to society. An example of this is how visual art is highly rewarded above other mediums, being often connoted with high society. Ocular-centrism and its impact within culture create a great opportunity to racial and cultural discrimination, as it creates a narrative of intellectual superiority to the other senses, and by so other cultures that are not vision centred are denominated as primitive . This gave the rise of the concept of Anthropology of the senses, that studies human behaviour through time by the medium of the senses.

Connecting back to sound, it’s imperative to understand the massive rule visual stimuli has through the development and creation of sound compositions. Visual aesthetic will always play a part in experiencing sound. If you hear a record, you will be influence by the art work in its cover. If you visit a sound installation, the limiting visual boundaries will impact the piece itself. In someway this visual dominance is impossible to escape, but when the senses relate to a specific sense culture or ethnic background, it’s important to dissolve the ocular centrism bias.

Artistic performances are also greatly dominated by ocular centrism, this can lead to waste of experience possibilities. Let’s take for example the western classical music concert, where the audience sits patiently and observes the musicians. Experiencing the music in a reserved and elegant way. This sonic practice comes directly from a social privilege, adopting the sense of sight as their own, and contrasting themselves from lower classes that are denominated with other senses. In this case the concert hall is a loss of experiencing potential, because sound is perceive not foley by the ears, sitting id not even the most convenient acoustic position. Also sound and music can express in the individual to dance or move, the concert hall limits this movement from the audience, just to impose higher class behaviour.