Exposition

Ebb/Flow - Flow/Ebb: A Dialogue Between Visual Arts and Music (2025)

Alex Designori

About this exposition

This research explores the synergy between auditory and visual sensory impressions, investigating how music and visual arts can merge, interact, and resonate reciprocally to create a unique cross-modal performance. Central to this research is the collaboration with the visual artist Damiano Colombi. The focus is placed on two distinct types of interaction: large canvases enriching the visual space on stage, around which the musician moves, and digital projections created with TouchDesigner, a software that generates real-time visuals reacting to the music. These contrasting approaches shape an immersive experience, transforming sound into moving images and creating a dynamic interplay between structured visual elements and fluid digital projections. A central challenge of this research is to create a balanced interaction between the auditory and visual components, so that each artistic discipline complements and enhances the other, allowing a continuous dialogue between sound and image. Throughout the creative process, these ideas evolved organically, guided by continuous experimentation and reflection. By documenting the sensations, insights, and evolving artistic choices, this research not only explores the theoretical and technical intersections between music and visual arts but also highlights the deeply personal and intuitive nature of interdisciplinary collaboration. Ultimately, this research provides a framework for crafting audiovisual performances that foster a compelling and harmonious fusion of music and visual arts.
typeresearch exposition
keywordsinterdisciplinarity, crossmodal correspondences, saxophone, visual art, audiovisual performance
date08/11/2024
published22/05/2025
last modified22/05/2025
statuspublished
share statusprivate
copyrightAlex Designori
licenseCC BY-NC-ND
languageEnglish
urlhttps://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/3163518/3163519
doihttps://doi.org/10.22501/koncon.3163518
published inKC Research Portal
portal issue1. Master Research Projects


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