LCC/CRiSAP Sound Arts Guest Lecture Series | Autumn Term 2025

LCC/CRiSAP Sound Arts Guest Lecture Series | Autumn Term 2025

By Creative Research in Sound Arts Practice CRiSAP

Overview

Sound Arts Guest Lecture Series - Autumn Term 2025. A CRiSAP and LCC Sound Arts Department collaboration at London College of Communication.

About this event


Presented by LCC Sound Arts and the CRiSAP Research Centre 

Convened by Annie Goh with support from the Course Support Admin and Sound Arts Tech teams.  

Thursdays at 2.30pm-4.30pm (UK time)  

Lecture Theatre B, London College of Communication, University of Arts, London 

The Autumn Term lectures will be held in-person and livestreamed for external guests. 

If you are not currently studying at UAL and would like to watch the livestream via Zoom, please reserve your spot through the Eventbrite


Important information

  • The lectures will be held in-person for UAL staff & students, and livestreamed for external guests. Eventbrite booking is for guests not currently studying/ working at UAL, who would like to watch a livestream of the event via Zoom.
  • Please note that you will need to book for each event in the series you wish to attend.
  • You must book at least 24 hours before the lecture takes place to ensure your registration has been received. Please note bookings are made subject to availability and final decision of the guest speaker.
  • You will be sent the Zoom link the day before the lecture you have booked. Please only email if there are any specific issues: crisap@arts.ac.uk

This livestream will be hosted on Zoom. UAL's Virtual Event Privacy Notice sets out how your personal information will be collected and processed when you register and attend a UAL virtual event on Zoom:
arts.ac.uk/privacy-information/ual-virtual-event-privacy-notice


Filming and photography notice

Please note that filming and photography may be taking place at this event. Both bigger and smaller groups and individuals may be captured on camera. All imagery and footage may at some point be published on the College websites, social media channels, and in print.

Category: Arts, Other

Good to know

Highlights

  • 70 days 3 hours
  • In person

Location

UAL London College of Communication

Elephant and Castle

London SE1 6SB United Kingdom

How do you want to get there?

Agenda
3:00 PM - 5:00 PM

Week 1: 2nd October - Ultra-Red

Ultra-Red 

***Please note that this lecture will run 3pm-5pm*** Ultra-red, formed in 1994, studies, develops, and tests procedures for collective listening that contribute directly to political struggles. Ultra-red draw on the traditions of musique concrète, conceptualism, popular education, and militant inquiry in their development of protocols for organised listening. Ultra-red invite communities to listen to the acoustics of contested spaces, their own and others' demands and desires, the echoes of historical memories of struggle, and their own self-organising activities. It is currently active in LA, NY and in the U.K facebook.com/ultraredcollective

2:30 PM - 4:30 PM

Week 2: 9th October – Gary Stewart

Gary Stewart

Gary Stewart is an interdisciplinary artist exploring issues of identity and culture through a range of theoretical, fictional and artistic frames. With Trevor Mathison he is part of research, production and performance artist group Dubmorphology. Based at his Dark Energy Studio in London he performs as experimental improvisational sound artist Bantu. gary-stewart-e6bu.squarespace.com

2:30 PM - 4:30 PM

Week 3: 16th October – Lynnée Denise

Lynnée Denise

Lynnée Denise, a global practitioner of sound, language, and Black Atlantic thought, is an Amsterdam–Johannesburg–based writer and interdisciplinary artist from Los Angeles, California. Influenced by her parents’ record collection and the sonic experimentation of the 1980s, her work traces the migrations of music and the role of Black electronic traditions in the African Diaspora. In 2013, she coined the term DJ Scholarship to describe how knowledge is gathered, interpreted, and produced through a conceptual and theoretical framework, shifting the role of the DJ from party purveyor to archivist and cultural worker. A doctoral student in the Department of Visual Culture at Goldsmiths, University of London, Denise’s research explores how sound system culture creates a living archive for the Black queer diaspora. IG: lynneedenise | Websites: djlynneedenise.com and theinternationallocals.nl

Organized by

Free
Oct 2 · 2:30 PM GMT+1