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lawrence abu hamdan munch museum exhibition golan heights 1234753861

Lawrence Abu Hamdan's exhibition "Zifzafa" has opened at the Munch Museum in Oslo, featuring a politically charged exploration of sound as both a celebration of life and a tool of displacement. The show centers on a forensic audio investigation into the impact of 31 planned wind turbines on the native population in the Israeli-occupied Syrian Golan Heights (Jawlan). Works include a single-channel video projection "Wind Ensemble" (2024) featuring Jawlani saxophonist Amr Mdah, CGI animations visualizing sound pollution, and a 45-minute film "Zifzafa: Livestream Audio Essay" (2025) presented as a video game walkthrough that allows viewers to simulate the sonic impact of the turbines. The game incorporates field recordings by local composer Busher Kanj Abu Saleh and turbine noise recorded by engineer Adam Laschinger, capturing sounds of daily life such as wedding announcements, flute music, and water pumps that represent acts of resistance against Israeli occupation.

lawrence abu hamdan munch museum exhibition golan heights 1234753861

Lawrence Abu Hamdan's exhibition "Zifzafa" has opened at the Munch Museum in Oslo, featuring a politically charged exploration of sound as both a celebration of life and a tool of displacement. The show centers on a forensic audio investigation into the impact of 31 wind turbines planned for the Israeli-occupied Syrian Golan Heights, or Jawlan. Key works include the video projection *Wind Ensemble* (2024) featuring saxophonist Amr Mdah, CGI animations *Tilting at windmills i, ii & iii* (2024), and the 45-minute film *Zifzafa: Livestream Audio Essay* (2025), which uses a video game walkthrough format to simulate the sonic pollution that will affect local homes—some as close as 115 feet from the turbines. The game incorporates field recordings by local composer Busher Kanj Abu Saleh and turbine noise from Germany, highlighting the sounds of daily life and resistance.