Lewis Henry Cook is a Glasgow-based artist working across sound, performance, moving image and collaborative cultural production. His practice explores electronic music as a social and spatial medium, moving between recording, live performance, installation-like environments and collective infrastructures.
His work often investigates relationships between sound, ritual, repetition and group experience, treating listening as both an aesthetic and embodied process. Alongside releases and performances under projects including Free Love, LUGH and Lugas Europ, Cook develops durational works, collaborative events and site-responsive performances that explore how electronic music operates within shared physical and perceptual space.
He is the founder and director of the Glasgow Library of Synthesized Sound (GLOSS), the UK’s first artist-led, non-profit electronic music library. Through this work he has developed workshops, recording programmes and public projects that frame access to electronic instruments and studio practice as a form of collective cultural production.
Cook also works as an educator and facilitator, drawing on his experience as a yoga teacher and neurodivergent artist to develop approaches to music-making that emphasise listening, embodiment, accessibility and group awareness.