Dià

sound sculpture (2016)
fiberglass, paint coated resins, iron and concrete
(187x85x289 cm)

Dià

The sculpture Dià (from greek διά, through) combines the dimensions of silence and sound. The sculpture is shaped as a golden ratio double horn, through which the spectators may listen to or observe the surrounding landscape. It is a device that invites the audience to interact with the two cavities as a megaphone or a peephole, to start an intimate dialogue through the sculpture itself.
The sculpture was first installed in 2016 on a piece of no man’s land on the top of Mount Pal Piccolo (1780 m) on the border between Italy and Austria, where World War I was fought, to symbolically connect, both visually and acoustically, the first lines’ trenches. At a time when borders are closing again and walls are built anew, the sculpture Dià embodies a message of dialogue that seems more and more relevant.
Later the sculpture was reassembled and consolidated with composite materials (fiberglass, paint coated resins with an internal metal structure and a concrete base) taking its final form to be exhibited in the Jardin de Tuileries in Paris in 2018 for FIAC Hors le Murs; then it joined the permanent collection of the Chateau de Vullierens in Switzerland in 2019.