In June, the High Museum of Art will unveil "Sonic Playground," an installation of sound sculptures by internationally renowned designer Yuri Suzuki on The Woodruff Arts Center's Carroll Slater Sifly Piazza. The installation continues a multiyear initiative to animate the High's outdoor space with site-specific commissions that engage visitors of all ages in participatory art experiences. It will be the High's first venture into exploring the notion of audible play — how sounds can be constructed, altered and experienced.
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- Parabolic – These structures will send sounds from one end of the Piazza to the other without using any electricity. The shape is designed so a person on one side of the Piazza can clearly hear a person speaking many feet away on the other side.
- Amplify – Visitors may sit or rest near these megaphone-shaped structures, which will amplify surrounding sounds.
- Flower – Creating direct lines of communication at different heights, these structures will feature low- and high-positioned horns.
- Long Horn – These pipes will create metallic sound effects when visitors speak through them.
- High Horn – Visitors at varying heights may stand or rest under the lower horn structures and listen to sounds coming from horns higher above their heads.
- Switch – These structures swap the way visitors hear sounds by changing their input. When a person stands in the structure, his or her right ear will receive sounds from the left-hand side, and the left ear will receive sounds from the right-hand side.
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This summer's project builds on the success of the four previous piazza commissions: Spanish designer Jaime Hayon's "Merry Go Zoo" (2017) and "Tiovivo" (2016) and 2014–2015's "Mi Casa, Your Casa" and "Los Trompos" ("The Spinning Tops") by Mexican designers Héctor Esrawe and Ignacio Cadena.