“Audio-Visualism offers a rigorous and expansive reframing of the relationship between sound and image in contemporary artistic practice. Drawing on long historical trajectories of audio-visual practice, critical reflection, and first-hand practitioner insight, the book moves beyond cinematic models to address live, immersive, and socially engaged work. It captures the vitality and diversity of the field today, standing as an essential scholarly contribution and an engaging resource—an essential guide to where audio-visual practice has come from, and where it may be heading.”Christl Baur, Head Program Director of the Ars Electronica Festival“Audio-Visualism succeeds as a record of a field becoming conscious of itself. By placing experiential knowledge, Indigenous worldviews, and practice-led inquiry alongside critical analysis, the book captures audio-visual work at a point of heightened articulation. There is an unmistakable sense that these conversations are unfolding at the threshold of longer historical arcs, as tools, practices, and communities converge and are named from within. As the chapters accumulate, the reader senses a period of unusual creative density - one future generations will study not as background, but as origin.”Kelly Snook, Ph.D., Music Producer, Sonification Researcher, Co-Founder and Co-Director of Mimu Gloves and the Harmonics Institute“This book is a clear and authoritative analysis of audio-visual practice as a mature artistic discipline. Enriched by the knowledge of artists working in the field, it moves beyond screen-based paradigms to address the evolution of the genre. Both rigorous and accessible, Audio-Visualism establishes itself as the ultimate reference, presenting sound and image as a unified, performative language.”Alain Thibault, Artistic Director of the Elektra Festival & Biennial, and AV artist.