Silence in Do is an interwoven narrative where image and sound interact.

Zarhoni’s work consists of seven one-minute chapters. He started from recently recovered low-fi digital recordings made from a television screen on which VHS footage of a wedding was played. Faded and delayed images of the marriage and a national mourning alternate. The artist transforms and mixes the material and immaterial aspects of these archival images, accentuating the visual stillness of that moment. He plays with the alchemy of digital colours, but also focuses on sound – or its absence. He reinterprets that stillness throughout the seven chapters by focusing on a different musical note each time: DO-RE-MI-FA-SOL-LA-SI. Each note is a combination of the sound of an analogue synthesiser with layers of recorded and edited silences.