How does an environment sound that is ecologically sustainable and socially integrative, fair, and peaceful? Who has the right to decide about the production, organization, and distribution of sound? This project aims at expanding and enhancing sonic awareness as a basis for empowering sonic citizens to be able to respond these questions. We all are producing sound, communicating through sound, and surrounded by sound. This project intends to define our sonic environments as sonic commons. Sonic commons are outlined here as networks and agencies for sound perception, generation, and dissemination in which we all—humans and non- humans—should be able to live together in self-determined and sustainable ways. To achieve these goals, this project pursues a bottom-up and participatory form of art-based research. Stakeholders from the civil society will collaborate with the project team to become co-researchers. Their work will be complemented by guest researchers from different disciplines in the social sciences, arts and humanities. This new model of integrative arts-based research will re-evaluate the boundaries within academia and between academia and the civil society. This intertwinement of art, research, and societal stakeholders aims at transforming the object of research (our co-existence in sound) and the participant researchers (the sonic citizens) towards the realization of a sonic democracy.
Monday 12. October to Wednesday 14. October 2026
Helsinki Music Centre, Black Box Concert Hall
Go to the symposium's call page: here
Download the call PDF
Angela Bartram & Jaana Erkkilä-Hill
Artists, researchers and collaborators work in a three-week residency in the project space of
Grow Plymouth, 14 Drake Circus, PL4 8AQ
Public open days: Tuesday 28th & Wednesday 29th April 2026, 11 am – 2pm;
Final Event: 29th April 5 – 8pm
Link to the gallery page: here
Installation at Tampere Biennale, by Petri Kuljuntausta
This is a sound art work by Petri Kuljuntausta, spread across Keskustori in Tampere, Finland.
Link to the festival page: here
Panel at the 2025 ISCH conference: ‘Human/Nature – Entanglements in Cultural History’; 16–19 June 2025, Rovaniemi, Finland
Convenors: Alex Arteaga, Jaana Erkkilä-Hill
Panellists: Leena Valkeapää, Tuula Närhinen, Angela Bartram, Petri Kuljuntausta, Jan Schacher
Link to the conference page: here
Kieppi, Kokkola Natural History Museum; Exhibition
With Jaana Erkkilä-Hill and Petri Kuljuntausta
Link to the Museum page: here
Rovaniemi, around the town
With Alex Arteaga
Link to the event page on the Research Catalogue: here
With Alex Arteaga, Angela Bartram, Jaana Erkkilä-Hill, Petri Kuljuntausta, and Jan Schacher
Conceived and facilitated by Alex Arteaga, Emma Cocker, Kirsi Heimonen. With Esa Kirkkopelto
Jaana Erkkilä-Hill, Jan Schacher, Petri Kuljuntasuta, and Jari Rinne