Michelle
Rosenberg is an artist and architect who makes participatory
installations that investigate how we interact with sound.
In a series of work called "Dynamic Headphones," Michelle
modifies portable headphones as well as creates acoustic headphones
that reflect and filter live sound. These projects highlight sounds
in the environment that previously may have gone unnoticed. In other
installations, Michelle incorporates game calls and other noisemakers
to animate objects and situations. Several of these public installations
allow controlled communication with wildlife.
Michelle has exhibited her work at galleries including Exit Art
and PS122 in New York; Western Exhibitions in Chicago; and Small
A Projects in Portland, Oregon. She has created outdoor site specific
installations at Socrates Sculpture Park in Queens; the Peekskill
Project in Peekskill, New York; and Johns Hopkins University in
Baltimore, Maryland. She has recently lectured on the history of
listening devices for Dorkbot at Location One in New York and attended
The Skowhegan School for Painting and Sculpture in Maine. Michelle
was born in Manchester, England to Italian and Jewish Parents. She
graduated from the The Rhode Island School of Design with a Bachelor
of Fine Arts and Bachelor of Architecture. She lives and works in
Brooklyn, New York.
Ms. Rosenberg was nominated by Douglas Repetto, artist, teacher
and Director of Research at the Columbia University Computer Music
Center.
Read Ms. Rosenberg's blog
posts.
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