Listening to the soundscape and enjoying the view.
Acqua Alta : En Clave de Sol, 2019
Tomas Saraceno ( b. 1973 Argentina )
The city of Venice developed an alarm system to warn against high water. Sixteen sirens are spread around the six sestieri to warn that acqua alta is expected to reach the city within two to four hours. The tones rise in correspondence to the 4 levels of flooding, The sound work “Acqua Alta: En Clave de Sol” speculates on how the flooding city might sound in a hundred years, its vulnerable ecology completely submerged under the quick-flooding tides, its foundations eroded by the overexploitation of the soil and water.
The original alarm recordings become the starting point for a sound composition that amplifies the inaudible score of global warming. Six speakers distributed around the Gaggiandre acoustically expand the ebb and flow of the Arsenale waters, on their six hour cycle. The climatic soundscape reverberates to predictions of ocean swelling to come over the next decades. Water is expected to cover entire territories while simultaneously exposing geopolitical inequalities that will see more than two billion climate refugees by the end of 2100.
An intermittent signal resounds through the Gaggiandre at the frequency of tidal phases, making audible the urgent voices of sea levels as they rise, its lifeforms and the anthropogenic noise pollution that affects them. Synchronously, the sun draws sound waves in light of acqua alta, reflecting a score in elemental motion, composing in ‘clave de sol’. In the blurred figure of space, nudging and bending as the water rise, we come to understand that we rely on a reciprocal alliance between the elements and effects, the shifting winds, the exchange of heat and momentum and the rippling pull of the lunar cycle.
Listening to the soundscape and enjoying the view.
Acqua Alta : En Clave de Sol, 2019
Tomas Saraceno ( b. 1973 Argentina )
The city of Venice developed an alarm system to warn against high water. Sixteen sirens are spread around the six sestieri to warn that acqua alta is expected to reach the city within two to four hours. The tones rise in correspondence to the 4 levels of flooding, The sound work “Acqua Alta: En Clave de Sol” speculates on how the flooding city might sound in a hundred years, its vulnerable ecology completely submerged under the quick-flooding tides, its foundations eroded by the overexploitation of the soil and water.
The original alarm recordings become the starting point for a sound composition that amplifies the inaudible score of global warming. Six speakers distributed around the Gaggiandre acoustically expand the ebb and flow of the Arsenale waters, on their six hour cycle. The climatic soundscape reverberates to predictions of ocean swelling to come over the next decades. Water is expected to cover entire territories while simultaneously exposing geopolitical inequalities that will see more than two billion climate refugees by the end of 2100.
An intermittent signal resounds through the Gaggiandre at the frequency of tidal phases, making audible the urgent voices of sea levels as they rise, its lifeforms and the anthropogenic noise pollution that affects them. Synchronously, the sun draws sound waves in light of acqua alta, reflecting a score in elemental motion, composing in ‘clave de sol’. In the blurred figure of space, nudging and bending as the water rise, we come to understand that we rely on a reciprocal alliance between the elements and effects, the shifting winds, the exchange of heat and momentum and the rippling pull of the lunar cycle.