Look up! Check out 茄子直播鈥檚 musical exploration of the night sky and these other Nuit Blanche events
Imagine a time in Toronto before city lights and skyscrapers, when you could look up and see the night sky, bright with stars and planets.
Matt Russo wants to give Torontonians a taste of what the city was like before light pollution with his , the all-night art festival that begins on Saturday evening.
The astrophysicist and planetarium operator at University of Toronto鈥檚 Dunlap Institute for Astronomy & Astrophysics in the Faculty of Arts & Science has teamed up with the institute and his friend and bandmate Andrew Santaguida to build an outdoor planetarium where you can see 鈥 and hear 鈥 the night sky.
鈥淭he night sky is something that can unite everyone,鈥 says Russo. 鈥淓veryone has access to the same sky and every culture realized that early on. They wanted to understand the motions of the night sky and what it means for them.
鈥淲ith this exhibit, we're trying to bring together all those experiences into a unified whole.鈥
Not only will people visiting the installation be able to see the twinkling stars, they鈥檒l be able to hear them too. One Sky comes out of the musical venture SYSTEM Sounds, whose members include Russo, Santaguida and Dan Tamayo, a postdoctoral researcher at the Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics and the Centre for Planetary Sciences at 茄子直播 Scarborough. The group creates music out of the movements of the universe.
鈥淭he music is out there,鈥 Russo previously told 茄子直播 News. 鈥淚'm just finding a way to make it audible. It's kind of like there's an electric guitar in space and I'm plugging in the cable.鈥
Russo is particularly interested in providing people who are partially sighted and blind an opportunity to experience the universe through sound. He鈥檚 been working with various groups including the Canadian Council of the Blind over the past year to fine tune that experience.
Earlier this year, Russo made headlines with his planetarium show Our Musical Universe, which gave attendees a multi-sensory experience of the cosmos. One Sky aims to do this on a larger scale.
鈥淭his is the main event,鈥 says Russo.
Read more about Our Musical Universe
Replicating the sights and sounds of the universe for Nuit Blanche was no easy task, says Russo.
鈥淭here's no outdoor dome in Toronto so we had to build our own,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat meant we had to learn everything about geodesic domes and projections.鈥
The geodesic dome is built out of PVC pipes assembled in geometric shapes, making the structure light but strong.
Russo, Santaguida and a group of Dunlap volunteers are also going to have to find novel ways to power through the all-night event.
鈥淲e have to be there all of Friday putting it up, and then Saturday overnight and then Sunday taking it down,鈥 says Russo. 鈥淚'm going to make sure we have plenty of pillows and sheets in the lounge so we can sneak away and take little power naps throughout the night.鈥
There鈥檚 more to explore at Nuit Blanche. Grab another cup of coffee and head over to these installations created by 茄子直播 community members:
Faculty of Medicine student Angela Qin鈥檚 sculpture will be featured as part of the Not Just Tourists Toronto installation. Qin is raising awareness about the rising rates of burnout and suicide among health-care professionals.
Two artists at the University of Toronto Scarborough are fusing sound design, engineering and art in a two-part exhibit called Long Distance Relationship. The installation connects people at the Campbell House Museum in downtown Toronto with visitors at the Scarborough Civic Centre, eliminating the 鈥渟tigmas that separate us,鈥 says one of the artists.