Sky Ear, listening to the sky.

The mobility of mobile not only has slowly become addicted to environmental noise, attributable only to a public telephone before the advent of cell phones, but it has also altered our perspective as a result of the acquisition of sounds. We have gone, in fact by a set of frequencies purely housewives to a variety of sounds considerably greater (although poorer quality), expressed by the instrument microphones, real receivers of sound information activated the almost everywhere. Sky Ear is a project that celebrates this paradigm shift of perspective through an event that takes place in a single night. A structure of optical fibers containing 1000 balloons filled with helium and equipped with LED ultrachiari and a number of mobile phones is allowed to float in the air allowing you to listen to the sounds of the sky (including its temporary electromagnetic phenomena). The color of the LED changes through sensors that communicate with each other influence each other and being influenced also by the incoming calls, resulting in a change in the colors of the 'phosphorescent cloud'. A display of invisible phenomena that interface with the ability to imagine new points of view through which enjoy the sounds that surround us. Designed by Usman Haque and funded by the Daniel Langlois Foundation for Art, Science and Technology , was held on July 4 in Fribourg in Switzerland, and on September 15 in Greenwich – London.