Sound Artist • Poet • Researcher of Language & Cultural Conditioning
Based in the UK
Email: [adenrhysartist@gmail.com]
Website: [adenrhys.com]
Practice Overview
Aden Rhys is a sound artist and poet whose work explores how language constructs emotional and social reality. Through voice, fragmented phrases, and poetic sound environments, Rhys investigates cultural conditioning and symbolic relativity — the ways words subtly influence behaviour, self-perception, and belief. Blending conceptual poetics with experimental audio, their practice reveals the quiet authority of everyday speech.
Education & Training
BA (Hons) Fine Art
Staffordshire University
2013–2016
Art & Philosophy – Higher Education Award
University of Reading
2012–2013
Independent Research Practice (Self-directed)
Focus: sound art methodologies, behavioural linguistics, symbolic relativity, experimental poetics
2018–Present
Artistic Practice & Methods
- Voice recording, spoken-word composition
- Sound editing, layering, and manipulation
- Exploration of behavioural phrases and cultural scripts
- Poetic writing (page, fragment, minimal text)
- Conceptual development and critical research
- Sound as an extension of language and symbolic meaning
Themes & Research Areas
- cultural conditioning through language
- symbolic relativity and the construction of reality
- the emotional charge of everyday phrasing
- inherited linguistic scripts
- subtle behavioural influence
- poetics as deconstruction
- sound as cognitive architecture
Professional Interests
- sound installation
- contemporary poetics
- vocal performance and experimentation
- text-based conceptual practice
- research-led artmaking
- interdisciplinary collaboration
Skills
- Stereo and spatial sound composition
- Audio editing Ableton / Logic
- Experimental poetry
- Field recording
- Conceptual development
- Research writing
Artist Statement
My work investigates the ways language shapes us. I focus on the subtle forms of cultural conditioning found in everyday phrases — the quiet instructions and inherited scripts that influence our behaviour before we recognise them. Through sound and poetry, I explore symbolic relativity: how words create emotional realities and define the limits of our expression.
By fragmenting, stretching, or destabilising language, I reveal the mechanics beneath it — how tone becomes instruction, how phrasing becomes belief, how repetition becomes identity. My practice invites a slower, more critical form of listening so that we may hear not only the words spoken to us, but the frameworks they ask us to inhabit.