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This Distance Makes Us Feel Closer is an immersive, mountaintop sound work that resounds over miles of land surrounding the Magdalena Ridge Observatory at 10,600ft. Created with an ensemble of augmented car horns, this set of autonomous sonic beacons were placed within the landscape for a 60 minute sound piece connecting two disparate sides of the Magdalena Ridge. The sounds gently travel over the space while a small group of listeners, bundled against the freezing temperatures, watched over the changing light and gentle pulsing of the horns. The piece operated for one night as part of High Desert Test Site’s 2013 biennial of desert art. This poster (below) was designed by the fantastic Tiffanie Tran and handed out at the event.

Designed by: Tiffanie Tran

The Magdalena Ridge Observatory (MRO) sits on a ridge above the New Mexico Desert looking down at the horizon from nearly 11,000 feet. The ridge is surrounded by broad, grassy ranch land and is in close proximity to the Very Large Array and other astronomical outposts. Because of its perch, the MRO is an excellent site for viewing faraway objects near the horizon, like the International Space Station or asteroids. A 2.4 meter telescope sits on the ridge, as well as the future site of an interferometer which views the night’s sky at 10x the power of the Hubble Telescope. The ridge hosts a variety of weather stations, astronomical equipment, and experiments abandoned to time. I was originally attracted to the site because of its epic perch above the desert and the rigorous landscape that spreads out above and below a variety of listening areas. This offered the listener nearly endless ways to guide their own experience. Once the work was installed on the site, one realizes how sound functions in such a broad vacuum of space – that sound is vitally feeble without something to resonate with, sitting atop the ridge, there is no land to hold the sound in, only the broad desert spread out below, the Very Large Array dotting the distance. Miles of land and the immensity of the New Mexican desert.