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Hz - A sound Installation speculating the future of sounds

Final Year Project for Nanyang Technological University’s School of Art, Design, and Media
Supervised by Ang Song Nian
A simulation of the work in a virtual museum amidst covid 19 GENERATED IN UNREAL ENGINE

Gold award recipient of NTU ADM’s Sustainability Award 2020

Hz is an interactive sonic art installation that explores how people connect with nature in the city today and beyond through a sensorial experience. The work suggests the sounds of a city and how they evolve with humans and machines in this age of the Anthropocene, presenting them with sculptures of mediated nature. With human’s dominant force on the environment, they have great influence over the mix of sounds heard today. As agents of change in such a geological age, human activities have impact and humans find themselves caught in nature’s web. 

Urban living has resulted in an overpopulation of sounds. The sounds of the natural world end up mixing and competing with the sounds of the built environment, composing a soundscape that gets louder and more confusing. Nature sounds are more often than not overpowered and masked by sounds of the city. 

The carelessness of the modern Man is also leading to more and more species becoming extinct. Hz addresses issues of preservation and archiving by capturing what is fleeting and nearly extinct. The work explores permanence, presence, and re-presence of these sounds.

With uncertain future of sounds, Hz seeks to understand and rationalize the coexistence of Man and nature. Hz explores how Biophony, the sounds of the natural environment, is affected by Anthrophony; as they become more and more unnatural. 

Thoughts

What is natural? Being so familiar with the aural ecology of the city, is this really so strange? 

The Anthropocene will only bring people further away from the original design. In this confusing transitional period, city dwellers have to come to terms and respond to this evolving soundscape. 

The future of sounds is one that is uncertain. Sounds are fleeting.They can be here one moment, and gone the next. And in some cases, gone forever.


To the dead corals in the Oceans, 

To the extinct animals on our planet,

To the voids here on Earth,


What does extinction sound like? 

Or will the future become really silent?

Noiseless?

Alternatively, can the future become artificially mixed?
The world tuned to have no redundancy, no excess; take the good and throw out the bad.

The experience, understanding, and perception of Nature constantly rewritten and redefined by our progressing world​​​​​​​

The Question of Authenticity :