How an Art Installation Is Silencing New York City


The Big Apple is among the top 10 noisiest cities in the world and most certainly the loudest in North America. Finding moments of peace and quiet are hard to come by. But a new exhibition at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum by artist Doug Wheeler offers a space of near silence. PSAD Synthetic Desert III In “PSAD Synthetic Desert III (1971),” Wheeler has transformed a museum gallery into a semi-anechoic chamber designed to suppress all but the lowest levels of ambient sound. The room’s lighting and configuration are also designed to induce an optical impression of infinite space. For the project, originally conceived in the 1960s and 70s, Wheeler was inspired by his own experience in the deserts of northern Arizona where near-silent conditions profoundly influence the visual sensation of distance. Revolutionary acoustic technology from New Jersey–based chemical company, BASF Corp. was used in the installation. The Guggenheim’s presentation features 400 pyramids and 600 wedges of Basotect®, BASF’s flexible, open-cell melamine foam with high sound-absorption properties. “Silence as we know it measures at 30 decibels,” said Doyle Robertson, an expert on melamine foam for BASF, in a statement, “and Wheeler’s semi-anechoic chamber will measure in ... , Architizer Editors, read more Architizer http://ift.tt/2rUER0p

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