Sound, as propagating energy, opens new territories for spatial research across large-scale environments, accessing dimensions and invisible forces that shape our world. This presentation explores how an energetic spatial practice generates methodologies for understanding space and creating artworks, revealing the relational dynamics that fundamentally constitute our environments.
Projected sound beams make audible the invisible territories within architecture, infrastructure, public space, and atmospheric fields. These interventions expose built environments as dynamic systems—zones of pressure, density, and movement that are shaped by historical accumulations and power structures as much as physical forces.
From architectural acoustics to earth-bound and cosmological scales, the practice treats space as membrane—a permeable interface between energetic forces rather than solid boundary. Sound installations become instruments for spatial knowledge—sonic cartographies that trace forces operating across intimate, terrestrial, and atmospheric dimensions.
Through large-scale propagation and atmospheric intervention, sound practice fundamentally reconceptualizes our understanding of spatial relations, positioning the energetic dimensions of space as primary subjects of investigation.
Free admission
Event in English
Photo credit to Pieter Kiers