IREN MÁRQUEZ DOS SANTOS



Iren Márquez Dos Santos is a trans non binary artist and researcher whose practice engages sound archives and music creation as tools of resistance and healing. Moving across sound design, field recording, music production, workshops and performance, their work generates spaces for radical listening and resistance against the erasure enacted by the gaze of Western epistemologies.

Their research traces the political materiality of the sea through an analysis of underwater sound as a medium capable of revealing fractured and conflicting environmental realities, shaped by colonial historical narratives. Within this framework, rhythmic contamination and Afrofuturist trans-oceanic frequencies operate as forms of sonic intervention, challenging the violence of ecological extractivism.

Bringing into bodily and historical resonance the experiences of Afro-descendant diasporic communities, Iren’s work interweaves experimental electronics with healing practices as a way to honor, remember and expand the ancestral knowledge coded in sonic vibrations.

Iren has presented work in institutions including Matadero Madrid, La Casa Encendida, Centro de Arte Dos de Mayo, Judson Church of New York, Conde Duque, among others, and is a long term collaborator of collectives Ayllu, Migrantxs Transgresorxs, Osikán Vivero de Creación, situating their emerging practice within a curatorial discourse at the crossroad of sound, art and anticolonial trans activism.


evor4.prod@gmail.com

Soundcloud

Instagram










RESIDENCIES AND COLABORATIONS




SOUNDSCAPE - ÍDEM FESTIVAL, PERFORMING ARTS FESTIVAL, LA CASA ENCENDIDA, MADRID
-SEPTEMBER 2025




Soundscape, soundcloud link
ÍDEM Festival La Casa Encendida link


Creation and design of the soundscape for the performance and installation Tuerce by artist Euyín Eugene, held during the ÍDEM Performing Arts Festival at La Casa Encendida, September 2025.

Tuerce is an installation and performance born from the question: “What if the gender dysphoria could speak through a body, what would it say?”. Euyin wevaes the body together with nature elements - river, thistle and orchidea - questioning the imposition of the sex-gender system and its colonial legacy, in a gesture that looked after restablishing a relation with pre-colonial cosmovisions.







©2037 RIGHTS RESERVED