Rites
of Eternal Wind
Il Korkut Sonic Arts Triennale
Dedicated to sound and listening, the Triennale creates a space for a wide range of sonic practices without restricting them by institutional boundaries. Over the course of two months, Rites of Eternal Wind will host sound installations and live events, listening sessions and soundwalks, hybrid lectures, discussions and workshops, somatic performances and explorations of sonic rituals and environments where sound is absent or even impossible.
Tselinny Center of Contemporary Culture
Bint Mbareh

Bint Mbareh is a sound researcher, artist, and composer with a focus on water in Palestine. Growing up in Ramallah, West Bank, she later began studying rain-summoning songs as both a communal music practice and a link between waves of water and waves of sound, which naturally led her to questions about how both have an inherent ability to dissolve borders — not only those between physical bodies or between states, but also between past, present, and future. 

Working with performance, installation, and radio pieces, she focuses on how cultural practice becomes embodied in people whose communities are subjected to extreme structural violence, and how to twist and destabilize settler-colonial epistemologies that make the ongoing genocide possible by leaking through their notions of land and history, centering Palestinian agency and ways of knowing as an instigator for political revolution.

Bint Mbareh will open the Rites of Eternal Wind concert program with a solo performance built around layered loops of her own voice, alongside poetry, found sounds, and her playing the buzuq — a long-necked fretted lute prominent in Palestinian, Lebanese, Syrian, and other musical traditions of West Asia.  

The Whispering Choir

Workshop and performance (2026)

Her contribution to the Triennale public program will also take the form of what she conceptually calls a choir — an improvised group singing practice for non-musicians, often joined by her peers, collaborators, and both old and new friends. Described as “a medium that’s literally breaking the borders between our bodies,” the choir in this iteration will focus on whispering as a vocal practice. It will be open to anyone who wishes to join, with participants able to apply to a two-day collaborative workshop led by Bint Mbareh in collaboration with the psychoacoustics research platform Impossible Territories.

The Whisperer says:

“Instead of repeating the old, worn-out tune of absolute silence, imagined only in an airless void, let us turn to those who would take this very air away. For in such silence, even a whisper is no longer sublime”

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Tselinny Center of Contemporary Culture