Music & Sound Design
SHELF LIFE
Created the sound design and music for projection mapping on the walls of the old city of Jerusalem
Year :
2016
Industry :
Festival
Client :
Festival of Light Jerusalem
Project Duration :
6 weeks

DESCRIPTION :
I was asked to create the music and sound track for an audio visual installation in Jerusalem's festival of light. The video art showed the duality of the city and its languages, Arabic and Hebrew.
PROCESS :
This project for Shelf Life, I approached sound as an active participant in the visual rhythm. The installation’s shifting light and geometry suggested a world that was both Hebrew and Arabic characters and their relation to Jerusalem and literature.
The music had to represent both cultures and I used traditional instruments and genres like the Oud, Darbuka and Klezmer, to connect it the main motif. The lighting and other animations were representing the light and i used more of an electronic approach and also used electricity sound to represent the changes in light.


Summary :
In the final installation, this fusion deepened the emotional resonance, transforming the visual experience into a shared sensory reflection of Jerusalem’s spirit. The intertwining of sound and light invited the audience to feel the pulse of the city, where ancient cultures and modern expression coexist. It became less a performance and more an atmosphere of connection, where language, rhythm, and illumination spoke as one.


More Projects
Music & Sound Design
SHELF LIFE
Created the sound design and music for projection mapping on the walls of the old city of Jerusalem
Year :
2016
Industry :
Festival
Client :
Festival of Light Jerusalem
Project Duration :
6 weeks

DESCRIPTION :
I was asked to create the music and sound track for an audio visual installation in Jerusalem's festival of light. The video art showed the duality of the city and its languages, Arabic and Hebrew.
PROCESS :
This project for Shelf Life, I approached sound as an active participant in the visual rhythm. The installation’s shifting light and geometry suggested a world that was both Hebrew and Arabic characters and their relation to Jerusalem and literature.
The music had to represent both cultures and I used traditional instruments and genres like the Oud, Darbuka and Klezmer, to connect it the main motif. The lighting and other animations were representing the light and i used more of an electronic approach and also used electricity sound to represent the changes in light.


Summary :
In the final installation, this fusion deepened the emotional resonance, transforming the visual experience into a shared sensory reflection of Jerusalem’s spirit. The intertwining of sound and light invited the audience to feel the pulse of the city, where ancient cultures and modern expression coexist. It became less a performance and more an atmosphere of connection, where language, rhythm, and illumination spoke as one.


More Projects
Music & Sound Design
SHELF LIFE
Created the sound design and music for projection mapping on the walls of the old city of Jerusalem
Year :
2016
Industry :
Festival
Client :
Festival of Light Jerusalem
Project Duration :
6 weeks

DESCRIPTION :
I was asked to create the music and sound track for an audio visual installation in Jerusalem's festival of light. The video art showed the duality of the city and its languages, Arabic and Hebrew.
PROCESS :
This project for Shelf Life, I approached sound as an active participant in the visual rhythm. The installation’s shifting light and geometry suggested a world that was both Hebrew and Arabic characters and their relation to Jerusalem and literature.
The music had to represent both cultures and I used traditional instruments and genres like the Oud, Darbuka and Klezmer, to connect it the main motif. The lighting and other animations were representing the light and i used more of an electronic approach and also used electricity sound to represent the changes in light.


Summary :
In the final installation, this fusion deepened the emotional resonance, transforming the visual experience into a shared sensory reflection of Jerusalem’s spirit. The intertwining of sound and light invited the audience to feel the pulse of the city, where ancient cultures and modern expression coexist. It became less a performance and more an atmosphere of connection, where language, rhythm, and illumination spoke as one.





