‘Experience beauty through sound – Acoustic Pavilion’, is an auditory horn installation that enables visitors to explore the relationship between space, shape and sound. the exhibition questions why people often associate beauty with only visual aspects, even though music plays an important part in our perception of this.
It builds upon the links between shapes and sounds in architecture, first analysed by Lannis Xenakis, and the resulting ‘Philips’ pavilion, created in 1958 with Le Corbusier, for the Brussels world exhibition.
Fittingly, the acoustic pavilion sits inside Le Corbusier’s Saint-Pierre church in Firminy, France, where it allows visitors to create their own listening devices. the network of ABS pipes provides the opportunity to make long, short, straight or angular structures, and for people to explore how sounds evolve through different forms.