Fractures investigates the concept of fracture both as a physical phenomenon and as a sonic metaphor. At the heart of the project is the image of the earthquake, understood not only as a geological event but as a symbol of discontinuity, imbalance, and transformation. This reference becomes a lens through which to explore how sound can crack, shift, collide, or recombine. Seismic recordings, manipulated sound materials, and synthetic structures intertwine, creating an environment where vibrations and fractures assume an autonomous expressive role.
Throughout the piece, the listener traverses a landscape suspended between the tangible and the digital, where fractures emerge not just as moments of rupture, but also as potential points of connection. Layers of movement and stillness alternate and overlap, drawing a continuum between collapse and reconstruction. These sonic trajectories show how instability can generate new forms and how fragmentation can open spaces for resonance, reflection, and redefinition.
The work centers on the spatial experience of the listener and invites a multidimensional listening experience in which sound acts simultaneously as a disturbance and as architecture: a living structure that continuously negotiates the boundary between chaos and coherence, presence and absence, matter and transformation.
