In this exhibition our TFAA artists share with you their interpretation of "Colour of Sound".
Does your mind's eye see a swirl of colors, a collage of shapes when listening to music? Does music play in your head when captivated by a work of art? Does color have sound and sound have color? Do musical compositions inspire visual compositions?
Each color is defined scientifically as well as societally. We think of red as a loud alarm, blaring warning or stop sign. But it can be as comforting as a heartbeat or a roaring fire. It's actual wavelength is the longest, but with a low frequency. It has less energy, but travels fastest.
Its complement, green, is a whisper, a cooling breeze in the forest, a verdant field stretching for miles in the sun or the crisp snap of brand-new paper currency. To give the green light to something is to allow it to proceed and move forward.
In this exhibition our TFAA artists share with you their interpretation of "Colour of Sound".