Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/49385
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dc.coverage.spatialUniversity of Amsterdam-
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-23T10:43:32Z-
dc.date.available2026-06-23T10:43:32Z-
dc.date.issued0026-
dc.date.submitted2026-06-07T15:51:47Z-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1942/49385-
dc.description.abstractThis sound presentation explores the butler as a figure of invisibility and inaudibility through artistic research. It analyses the service expression faire le meuble: literally, “to become furniture”. This instruction perfectly embodies the paradox of performing invisibility. During service, the butler must be audible enough to respond, yet quiet enough to vanish, maintaining a split stance between constant availability and discretion. Working at the intersection of performance, sound studies, and cultural analysis, this paper centers on a three-hour field recording of an exam dinner at a butler school, where the director (acting as maître d’hôtel) and an apprentice were equipped with lapel microphones. Through this material, it analyzes the gestures, vocal modulations, tones, and silences of service work as scripts of affective labour or what might be called the acoustics of service. Building on David Russel’s concept of "Tact" and Alizée Delpierre’s analyses of domestic work in ultra-wealthy households, I explore the theatrical and dramaturgical elements used to train the butlers in self-effacement.-
dc.formatsound presentation-
dc.subject.othersound piece-
dc.subject.otherservice work-
dc.subject.otherbutlering-
dc.titleThe Acoustics of Service: On the Performance of Invisibility in Butlering Practice (The Butler as a Buffer)-
dc.typeArtistic/designerly creation-
local.bibliographicCitation.jcatAOR-
local.type.specifiedArtefact:Experimental-
dc.date.started0026-04-23-
dc.date.ended0026-04-24-
arts.review.reviewDisciplineaudiovisuele kunsten-
arts.review.researchContextThis sound presentation was conceived as an experimental attempt to adapt a subchapter of my thesis, “The Butler as a Buffer”, from the chapter “Tone as a Holding Structure”.-
arts.review.impactDescriptionThis presentation allowed me to meet Esther Peeren, who chaired the panel I was part of, and who wrote The Spectral Metaphor, including a chapter on butlering practice. It also enabled me to begin a collaboration with writer Caszimir Cleutjens, whose work focuses mainly on service work, and whom I invited to contribute to an issue on Friction(lessness), co-edited with my supervisor Arne De Winde for Collateral Journal in 2026.-
arts.relatedInfo.relatedOrganizationhttps://www.collateral-journal.com/-
dc.identifier.urlhttps://www.nica-institute.com/event-cultures-of-in-visibility-and-in-audibility-conference/-
item.fulltextWith Fulltext-
item.accessRightsOpen Access-
item.fullcitation (0026) The Acoustics of Service: On the Performance of Invisibility in Butlering Practice (The Butler as a Buffer).-
Appears in Collections:Artistic/designerly creations
Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Programme - Cultures of Invisibility & InAudibility (1).pdfSupplementary material1.35 MBAdobe PDFView/Open
The Butler as a Buffer.mp3Supplementary material21.38 MBmp3View/Open
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