
Image: Qusay Awad
“Sound in a Void”
Qusay Awad, architect and multidisciplinary artist, is guest artist of the Immersive History Lab. Using spatial design, sculpture, sound, moving image, and performance, he explores themes of historical rupture, memory, displacement, and community—particularly through digital, multisensory experiences. We spoke to Qusay about his creative process, the role of sound and memory, and the value of collaborative work.

What is your starting point, and how does the artistic process develop?
Qusay: I usually begin with an idea that feels unresolved—often tied to an emotion. It could be something deeply personal, something shared by a wider community, or a story that speaks specifically to those who’ve lived through displacement and war-related trauma.
From there, I move into a research phase, gathering materials: oral histories, archival footage, photographs—sometimes fragments that aren’t clearly defined but carry emotional weight.
When the work is site-specific, I explore the spatial memory of the place—its geography, architecture, and hidden histories. With my background in architecture, I tend to read space in layers, observing how physical structures absorb and reflect social, political, and emotional imprints.
Do you interview people as well?
Qusay: Yes, and it’s a very sensitive process. I approach interviews with care—building trust, being intentional, and creating a shared space where people feel safe enough to open up.
In the multimedia project Above Our Waters in collaboration with artist Dhia Douss, we interviewed fishers from Tunisia’s coast. We asked about their daily lives and connection to the waters, especially concerning migration through the Mediterranean—a topic that can be deeply personal and politically loaded. Above Our Waters will be showcased on the 18th of July at Kunstraum Kreuzberg, Berlin.
How does something intangible become a material work?
Qusay: I never follow a fixed plan. I believe we live in ways that are often metaphysical. Histories are fluid. Time isn’t linear—it depends on who’s telling the story. I stay close to the data and voices gathered during research, but I try not to control the outcome. I let the process breathe and shift. I allow room for surprise.

Why is sound such an essential part of your work?
Qusay: I often ask myself: what would a memory feel like as a room, a corridor, or a void? And when I reach for the void, I find that words fail me—but sound does not.
Sound is invisible but present. It reshapes how we perceive space and can transport us somewhere else entirely. It’s a sensory bridge to memory, emotion, and time.