A Sensory Experience of the suffering of the Seas and Oceans: The Art Project “Listen to the Ocean/Sea”
August 05, 2025 | Cosmina Marcela OLTEAN ArtPageThe contemporary art project “Listen to the Ocean/Sea”, conceived by artist Mihaela Lungu in collaboration with Radu Homiceanu (sound design) and Dromp (new media), is on display from August 1–7 at the Mini Cinema space, part of the Cinemascop Garden at the EFORIE COLORAT Festival. The project invites us into an immersive experience that challenges everything we thought we knew about what is currently happening in the waters of our planet.
We often
imagine the ocean as a quiet, untouched paradise. But what lies beyond this
idealized image?
In reality,
the depths of the sea are a disturbing soundscape, marked by an invisible and
devastating chaos: underwater noise pollution. Mihaela Lungu’s
installation functions as a mirror reflecting our unbalanced relationship with
the aquatic world – a relationship defined by indifference, exploitation, and
the relentless pursuit of resources, at the expense of marine ecosystems.
The idea for
the project emerged from a simple, almost mundane observation: while looking at
a seashell, the artist recalled the universal myth that one can “hear the sea”
by bringing a shell to the ear. She asked herself: what if, instead of waves,
we could hear the ocean’s real sounds? What if, instead of a soothing
memory, the shell transmitted the desperate cry of marine life?
During her
research, Mihaela Lungu consulted the Ocean Conservation Research sound
library and discovered what she calls “the sounds of an assaulted marine
world.” This led her to incorporate those audio materials into the project,
as a warning signal. She began collaborating with Radu Homiceanu to
create a sound composition: a mix of real recordings of distressed marine life
and human-made sounds – from acoustic communication networks, military sonar,
oil drilling, to the infernal noise of commercial shipping vessels.
All these
sounds can be heard in the exhibition through shells transformed into
speakers, powered by eco-friendly, solar-charged batteries. Around
this sound core, the artist has built a complex multimedia installation.
One of the
key components of the exhibition is an interactive video projection,
developed in collaboration with new media artist Dromp. The projection,
connected to a proximity sensor, reacts to the visitor’s movements: the closer
you get to a shell to listen, the more agitated the water in the image becomes
– a metaphor for the imbalance we create through our mere presence.
Another element is a light installation resembling a chamber structure with spotlights connected to the audio system, pulsating in sync with the sound. The light intensity increases until it becomes blinding, placing the visitor in the shoes of marine creatures that navigate, hunt, communicate, and migrate through echolocation. These animals become disoriented by noise pollution, which leads to disorientation, accidents, and death.
The
exhibition also includes an object-based installation titled “Toy Beach Set”:
a beach playset made from recycled filament, 3D-printed and hand-finished by
the artist. But instead of classic marine shapes (fish, starfish, octopuses),
it features waste forms. The traditional sandcastle transforms into a “Sand
Supermarket”, alluding to consumerism and plastic pollution – a projection
of a dark future where plastic has replaced marine fauna and become the ocean’s
ultimate predator.
“Listen to
the Ocean/Sea” is a
visual, sonic, and sensory call to recognize, hear, feel, and fight the
invisible suffering of the deep.
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