A Lecture by Victoria Shen

A Lecture by Victoria Shen

Free
Thu, Apr 16, 2026 • 4:00 PM—5:00 PM

About this event

Arts & Culture

Co-Lab Projects presents: A Lecture by Victoria Shen With an introduction by Hannah Spector, Assistant Professor of Practice of Time & Technology Lecture: Thursday, April 16th, 3-4pm UT Art and Art History, Art 1.102, 2301 San Jacinto Blvd This event is FREE and open to the public Parking is available for a fee at the San Jacinto garage north of the Art Building Sponsored by the University of Texas College of Fine Arts Hosted by the University of Texas Art and Art History Department Be sure to also join us for Victoria’s performance presented in partnership with Fusebox Festival: Saturday, April 18th, doors at 8pm, performance at 9pm Co-Lab Projects, 5419 Glissman Rd, Austin, TX 78702 Get sliding scale tickets In this lecture, Victoria Shen (A.K.A. Evicshen) will share her experience as a sound artist, experimental music performer, and instrument-maker. Shen's sound practice is concerned with the spatiality/physicality of sound and its relationship to the human body. Her personal identity, her body, is the space her work utilizes to restructure sonic meaning. In her live performances, she proposes an exploration between meaning and non-meaning through the physical activation of noise tropes–the body as both subject and instrument. “My practice treats sound as a material force; something that pushes, scrapes, resists, and accumulates, rather than an abstract signal. Raised by a Cambodian refugee mother whose life was shaped by displacement and improvisation, I approach making through resourcefulness and embodied problem-solving. Scarcity, friction, and adaptation are not only biographical conditions but compositional principles. Originally trained in visual art and art history, I moved toward electroacoustic music and expanded turntablism while teaching myself circuit design and electronics. I build my own instruments, often attaching them directly to my body or designing them as prosthetic extensions, so that performance becomes a negotiation between flesh, gesture, and machine. My work explores tensions between control and chaos, virtuosity and collapse, intimacy and amplification. By foregrounding physical labor and instability, I challenge conventions of live musical consumption and destabilize assumptions about what constitutes an instrument. My recent and ongoing development focuses on deepening the integration of body and technology, particularly through analog systems. I am interested in corporeal circuitry: magnetic fields interacting with skin, embedded electronics, ferric materials, and wearable or tattooed audio media that collapse distinctions between organism and device. Moving forward, I aim to expand this research into more immersive, site-responsive works and collaborative formats, creating systems where the body becomes both archive and transmitter; simultaneously vulnerable, conductive, and generative.” Shen has performed solo across North America, Japan, China, Mexico, Australia/NZ, the UK, and Europe, as a member of the...

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Co-Lab Projects

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