UNSEEN PHOTO FAIR AMSTERDAM 2017
ASMR audio performance
FOR RADIO POIUYT
Where is going the photobook market?
How a curator analyses a photobook? By the story? By the editing? By the text? By the sequence? By the subject? By the photographer? By the publisher? By the photos? By the graphics? By the binding? By the paper?
How much attention and time do you give to all these factors when you are turning the pages? Is every hand similar?

The first audio book of a photobook Festival, playing with the limits of photography, joking about the glamour trend of the contemporary photography, and the easy trend of a deictic communication based on the hand fetishism.
Who is the real “author” of the book? The photographer? The graphic designer? The curator? Or the collector, the photobook fetishist?
I selected some books from the Unseen Photobook maket using 2 criteria:
- The book as a body
- The book of body project
I’ve flipped the pages of the book in 30 minutes of sound performance in real time, the half an hour before the presentation of the winner. The sound was transmitted online on youtube by the RADIO POIUYT.

Are you able to recognize a book by the sound of the turning of its pages?
Actually the sound is the less censored form of expression. This is way the ASMR* is the new trend to spread pleasure online

Unseen, Amsterdam September 2017

*ASMR - Autonomous sensory meridian response is a term used for an experience characterized by a static-like or tingling sensation on the skin that typically begins on the scalp and moves down the back of the neck and upper spine. It has been compared with auditory-tactile synesthesia ASMR signifies the subjective experience of "lowgrade euphoria" characterised by "a combination of positive feelings and a distinct static-like tingling sensation on the skin". It is most commonly triggered by specific acoustic, visual and digital media stimuli, and less commonly by intentional attentional control. ASMR was coined on 25 February 2010 by Jennifer Allen, a cybersecurity professional residing in New Yor. Proposed formal names included "Attention Induced Head Orgasm", "Attention Induced Euphoria" and "Attention Induced Observant Euphoria", whilst colloquial terms in usage included "brain massage", "head tingle", "brain tingle", "spine tingle" and "brain orgasm".