For the multimedia documentary theater Heavenly Bento (Bonn Biennale and Berlin, 2004; Singapore, 2005; Japan Society, New York, 2009. Production: post theater) he implemented the entire soundtrack in a multichannel audio environment. In 2006 he created, in collaboration with the artist Ivan Moudov, the audio installation Guide, presented at the Sofia Art Gallery and the ACC Galerie Weimar, amongst others. In 2007 Sibin Vassilev realized the composition for the sport drama B-Jugend (GRIPS Theater, Berlin). In 2008 he developed further musical space-compositions for post theater's skinSITEs XI and per_vilion IV (both in Salamanca, Spain), skinSITEs XII (Rijeka's Summer Nights, Croatia), Fight Club: A Chorus (State Opera Berlin) as well as Express Fight Club (tanznacht berlin'08). Furthermore his work Infrasonic Variations was invited at the 2008 Young Artists Biennale Bucharest. In 2009 he built the 16-channel sound installation Tonschleuse for the German Historical Museum, Berlin.
The sound artist Sibin Vassilev grew up in Sofia and Berlin. Currently he lives and works in Berlin.
Sibin Vassilev’s musical career began in the early nineties when he co-founded and played bass for the Bulgarian rock band Rag Dolls, a crossover outfit that shaped the Bulgarian music scene in the early years after the collapse of Communism. After releasing an LP, being nominated for awards and producing a number of music videos that dominated in the Bulgarian top ten, the bassist turned his attentions to electroacoustic music. At EXPO 2000 in Hanover Sibin Vassilev explored interactions between space, archi-tecture and sound, and how contents and themes can be shaped and enhanced through audio environments. His work appeared in the pavilions of Côte d’Ivoire, Benin, and the World Bank. For the 2003 Lange Nacht der Wissenschaften at the Humboldt University Berlin he developed two media installations. In 2003 he also produced the soundtrack for the multimedia performance evening Turnover [House, Unsettled] (Theater am Halleschen Ufer, Berlin. Production: post theater).
Sibin Vassilev’s musical career began in the early nineties when he co-founded and played bass for the Bulgarian rock band Rag Dolls, a crossover outfit that shaped the Bulgarian music scene in the early years after the collapse of Communism. After releasing an LP, being nominated for awards and producing a number of music videos that dominated in the Bulgarian top ten, the bassist turned his attentions to electroacoustic music. At EXPO 2000 in Hanover Sibin Vassilev explored interactions between space, archi-tecture and sound, and how contents and themes can be shaped and enhanced through audio environments. His work appeared in the pavilions of Côte d’Ivoire, Benin, and the World Bank. For the 2003 Lange Nacht der Wissenschaften at the Humboldt University Berlin he developed two media installations. In 2003 he also produced the soundtrack for the multimedia performance evening Turnover [House, Unsettled] (Theater am Halleschen Ufer, Berlin. Production: post theater).