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	<title>Binaural Views of Switzerland - On the traces of William England’s 1863 photographic journey through Switzerland: an audio-visual exhibition.</title>
	<link>https://binauralviewsofswitzerland.com</link>
	<description>Binaural Views of Switzerland - On the traces of William England’s 1863 photographic journey through Switzerland: an audio-visual exhibition.</description>
	<pubDate>Mon, 27 May 2019 17:09:13 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Binaural Views of Switzerland&#38;nbsp;On the traces of William England’s 1863 photographic journey through Switzerland: an audio-visual exhibition. 




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Binaural Views of Switzerland is an audio-visual observation of the changes caused by human activity in the Swiss Landscape since 1863, when the pioneering British photographer William England made his Grand Tour of Switzerland, creating stunning stereoscopic photographs of over 150 locations.
Artist Alan Alpenfelt, over a two month journey, has re-discovered 30 of these locations, documenting the changes in their aspects and atmospheres, re-presenting them in his exhibition, using binaural sound recording and 3D photography.
His work highlights the stark contrasts between past and present by immersing the visitor in the sights and sounds of each environment, then and now.
The centre of the exhibition is a Kaiser Panorama, which features the stereoscopic photographs linked to headphones through which the visitor can choose between the contrasting binaural soundscapes of the present day or the imagined ones of the past.
Awareness of the effects of mass tourism, modern transport, climate change and industrial development pervades the exhibition, stimulating questions
as to how resilience and conservation can somehow still be achieved.





	


	
	
	
	


Recording
soundscapes
Listening
to reality through the amplification of a microphone is like secretly
entering the fabric of the world. It’s like drifting with your ears
inside a dense matter, leaving your face out to breathe. It’s
spying without malice. It’s hearing a truth now, while perceiving
the effects of things that happened a few hours earlier, a few weeks
earlier, a few years earlier. It’s like listening to the
relationship of the human being with his/her world; perceiving,
perhaps, a communication between a mother and her children, where she
is speaking in Spanish and they in Swiss German, sometimes changing
the language in the same sentence, thus capturing by chance the
result of an integration into a new territory. It’s catching the
fleeting moment when a leaf touches the ground. It’s the clanging
of cow bells woven with the cries of playful children, creating a
sound substratum of the Alps; or that of a powerful mountain
waterfall mingled into the roar of a military jet. In an unrestricted
state of freedom in which things can flow, sounds move, influencing
each other as if in an endless dance.
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