Ada

Ada Denil – Nova Scotian Artist

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  • Ada
  • Sculpture
    • Copper Seaweed, 2025
      • a Room, for a While: LSA Artist Residency 2025
    • RENT FREE – cubes 2023-ongoing
      • RENT FREE – cubes 001 – 023
      • RENT FREE – cubes 024 – 042
      • RENT FREE – cubes 043 – 056
      • RENT FREE – cubes 057 – 086 * LSA Residency
      • RENT FREE – cubes 087 – 108 * LSA Residency
    • Steel House Plants 2023
    • Visible Cities, 2021
    • Steel Drawings, 2017-21
    • Lathomenon, 2020
    • Infants, 2019
    • Retrospectral, 2019
    • Profile (Self Portrait) // Self Portrait (Profile)
    • City Dweller, 2019
    • Plaster Extremities
    • Untitled (figure), 2019
    • Studies
  • Installation
    • A Room of One’s Own // Rent Free, 2023-ongoing
      • RENT FREE – cubes [001-023]
      • RENT FREE – cubes [024-042]
      • RENT FREE – cubes [043-056]
      • RENT FREE – cubes 057 – 086 * LSA Residency
      • RENT FREE – cubes 087 – 108 * LSA Residency
    • By, or as if by (Saskatoon), 2023
    • As far as, and…, 2023
    • Aeolian City 2022-23
    • Sound Installation – Beginnings
    • Reflection and Refraction, 2021
    • No Limit, 2021 (ongoing)
    • Icy Explorations, 2021
    • Vascular System, 2019
  • Flat Work
    • Drawing
    • Prints
    • Illustration
    • The Pantry, 2014-16
  • Animation
  • Contact
  • A Postcard Project

As far as, and…

Resonant Grounds: Site-Responsive Art in Point Pleasant Park, 2023 – NSCAD University

Resonant Grounds: Site-Responsive Art in point pleasant Park 2023

As far as, and… is a site responsive, wind-activated sound sculpture located at the southern point of Point Pleasant Park in Kjipuktuk/Halifax, Nova Scotia. Through complex but playful constructions and contraptions, I am working intentionally with the flux and uncertainty of meteorological events to produce unpredictable and intermittent auditory experiences. 

The phenomenon of Aeolian vibrations (named for Aeolus, the Greek god of the wind) is the source of the sound: Strings of equal length and varying thicknesses are strung and tuned. When the wind blows, the strings are set into motion, resonating through the three steel bodies, producing mysterious harmonic overtones which float and dissipate into the general soundscape. Each string is secured to two of the bodies, allowing for the vibrations to reverberate through the varied forms simultaneously. Percussive elements are also present in the forms, so in addition to acting as resonating bodies for the strings they will produce rhythmic tones when it rains.

The 3 forms are somewhat whimsical; each presents a sort of thematic visual composition while at the same time, none of them operate as a completely logical representation of anything recognizable. They are simply, and strangely, exactly what they are.

They stand at the edge of the peninsula, at a distance great enough to escape most of the noise of the city, as far away as possible while maintaining firm footing on the land. They are  loosely reminiscent, in their posture and position, of the familiar and purposeful placement of a lighthouse (such as the one that can be seen in the distance, on McNabs Island). However, they are certainly not visually similar enough to be seen as such a recognizable Nova Scotian feature. Their other-worldly appearance and open placement is intentionally (perhaps audaciously) visually conspicuous. Like a day beacon, the intention is to capture and draw in the attention of passers-by, bringing them close enough to experience their auditory function.

Our lives are incredibly noisy, and in order to cope with this we tend to (as a means of survival) learn to tune out many of the environmental sounds surrounding us. I’m questioning how we listen, hear, look, and see: specifically the acuity with which we engage in these sensory activities. In this work I am interested in the act of being present, of awareness, the act of looking and listening, and how active presence and awareness can alter our perception of the environments in which we find ourselves, as well as our place in them.

As far as, and… is an exploration, demonstration and experiment. It sits at the edge of two opposing physical realities (land and sea), interacting with and harnessing the wind and rain, producing sound, all of which are elements and products of energy that freely crosses physical boundaries.

Aeolian City

Sound Intervention – Beginnings


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