Sound
installations form a nexus between the visual, spatial, audio, and conceptual
mediums as a forum for artistic intervention. Strongly indebt to the tradition
of concept art, they create constellations of cross-medial relations, as
cryptograms designed for sensitising their audience to a dimension of attention
and awareness which is outside of the ordinary, only to create new vantage
points from which ordinary everyday experience is then relativized and thus also
transformed. They are invitations to take our personal existential refuge not
merely in thought, emotion, and self-reflection, but to experience the
possibility of a more extended relation to the world. They can only be
experienced fully through active participation of the audience, through
concentration, movement, and perception, which does not settle for the simple
objectification of what is presented, but rather, as a mode and goal of
perception, constantly stretches and moves, never allowing for simple
reflection.
As such,
they move through the spaces of music, art, architecture, literature,
philosophy, and even dance.