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Ceci est un event archivé de la Fête de la Culture 2024.

Borderline (Almaguin Highlands) by Jessica Thompson

En personne

Histoire et patrimoine Nature et plein air Activité physique et mouvement Auto-guidée La visite
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Date et heure

Cette activité se déroule pendant toute la durée de la Fête de la culture.

Lieu

NAISA North Media Arts Centre

313 Highway 124

South River, ON

Accès

Gratuit, et accepte des dons facultatifs à hauteur de votre contribution.

Offert en Anglais.

Accessible en chaise roulante et a des toillettes neutres.

Exhibition is information point to do a self-guided walking tour

À propos

Borderline is a critical mapmaking project by Jessica Thompson that uses sound to illuminate social and economic differences in local geographies. Visitors to the NAISA North Media Arts Centre in South River are invited to contribute to a large-scale soundmap of the Almaguin Highlands by borrowing a toolkit from the centre to go on a self-guided walk and map sounds in one of the villages in the Almaguin Highlands of their choice, or by using the Borderline mobile app. The sounds collected will be added to the map on an ongoing basis.

The Borderline iOS app enables users to automatically map sounds in their environment, put them in dialogue with other forms of data, and generate interactive soundscapes by playing sounds back into the environment.

Liens

Organisateur

New Adventures in Sound Art (NAISA)

New Adventures in Sound Art (NAISA) is a non-profit media arts organization that operates the fully accessible NAISA North Media Arts Centre. Arts presentation with a focus on sound and listening are the basis of its year-round exhibitions, online broadcasts and performances. The centre also includes a café which offers Muskoka Roastery coffee, a variety of teas, sodas, locally-baked goodies and Vegan Soups. Have lunch on an artist’s budget with the Artist’s Special.

New Adventures in Sound Art is located in the traditional territory of the Anishinabewaki peoples covered by the Williams Treaty (1923) and Robinson-Huron Treaty (1850). New Adventures in Sound Art recognizes the significant ongoing contributions of First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples to aural culture in Canada.

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