- Australia
Copyright © 2024 Powered by BCI Media Group Pty Ltd
Confirm Submission
Are you sure want to adding all Products to your Library?
Contact Detail
Miami-based 21st century late neo-romantic artist Frank Chinea Inguanzo has been named by Acoufelt as the latest foundational artist in its Acoustic Art Project. Frank joins other internationally acclaimed and emerging artists Alejandro Avakian, Helene Hardy, Drew Harrison, Takuro Kuwabara and Ross Morgan in this prestigious group.
“There has been a huge shift in the importance placed on workplace design” says Verne Markham, Managing Director for the Americas. “This stems from the abundance of research indicating there exists a real connection between office design and employee retention, well-being and productivity.” “Leading companies have been exploiting this information for a long time now, and the rest of the world is only just beginning to appreciate the reality of these long-term benefits”.
Acoustic management is one of the key pillars that sits at the heart of sophisticated workplace design and strategy. The connection between employee productivity and the state of the acoustic environment has been well documented, however, meeting the acoustic needs of a space has often meant compromising on aesthetic design. Acoufelt’s innovative acoustic solutions eliminate this compromise, allowing for design that caters to both the ears and the eyes.
Frank Chinea Inguanzo’s works, in the tradition of William Blake or Arnold Böcklin, present heroic figures in abyssal situations. They stand as shadows and spectres of gloomy allure. An ethereal background of indecipherable universe sets as a dream like imaginary in which the artist lives.
The Acoustic Art Project takes the works of a limited number of exceptional artists and makes it available to clients printed on acoustic absorptive material utilising Acoufelt’s QuietPrint™ capability. This capability allows the fibres of the acoustic material to be coloured with high precision, resulting in high resolution images, whilst ensuring there is no significant impact on the acoustic performance of the base material. As such, architects and designers can select from a broad range of contemporary artwork prints that can be used to reduce noise in any space.