(Instruments of Silence)

Gonzalo Silva & Susana Silva

Ariel Bybee Endowment Prize Winners ‘23

New York NY | Berkeley CA

Plan Your Visit

With exhibitions planned from coast to coast, this unique body of work is covering ground. Find exhibition information for New York and Berkeley below.

ON DISPLAY NOW

New York City

August 5-22, 2025

Sargent’s Daughters Gallery (370 Broadway, New York, NY)

Right in the middle of NYC’s rapidly-growing Tribeca arts district is Sargent’s Daughters Gallery, a boundary-pushing contemporary gallery. Artists Gonzalo and Susana unveiled their new body of work on August 5th. Drop into the gallery’s viewing room before it moves on.

COMING TO CALIFORNIA

Berkeley, CA

October 10-December 11, 2025

Graduate Theological Union Library (2400 Ridge Rd, Berkeley, CA)

Instrumentos de silencio will arrive to the west coast at Graduate Theological Union, the most comprehensive center for the graduate study of religion in North America.

Plus, join the Center at GTU on Oct. 10th for Critical Tensions: Latter-day Saint Art, Devotion, and Design.

Explore the Art

About The Exhibition

Scars / Scores

Instrumentos de silencio explores the tensions and resonances between hearing devices, inscription techniques, and processes of cultural syncretism in the encounters between the Americas and Europe. Through a constellation of works —combining paper cut-outs, 3D printing, UV printing on steel, and digital collage— it examines the ways in which music, as a technology of memory and writing, articulates genealogies of conquest, resistance, and cohabitation.

Memory is externalized through technical objects, and it is through them that we construct the narratives that give meaning to our past, shape our reality, and allow us to imagine possible futures. Codex notations, magnetic tapes, zoomorphic whistles, mechanical instruments, and early computers all act as vessels where musical practices are transformed into knowledge.

Coexistence / Contradiactions

Colonization, among other catastrophes, brought the disruption of technical traditions, leading to the atrophy of memory and the loss of the capacity to represent the future.

The exhibition, however, approaches the interweaving of cultural matrices not as fusion or hybridity, but as the coexistence of contradictions. It is not about denying the parts or seeking a synthesis, but about acknowledging the ongoing struggle within our subjectivity: between the indigenous and the European, between innovation and tradition, between the individual and the collective.

Restore / Activate

Pre-Columbian musical artifacts engage in dialogue with medieval European manuals, and between its perforations, imaginary scores reveal layers of exchange, violence, and appropriation that do not dissolve into synthesis but persist as active frictions. Instrumentos de silencio presents itself as an essay on plurality, on disarticulating inherited logics, and on creatively embracing the coexistence of elements in tension. It proposes a speculative archaeology of musical memory: an exploration through silences, fragments, and hybrid objects that do not seek to restore an origin, but to activate a critical listening to the traces technologies have inscribed upon bodies, territories, and cultures.

Score of Hanacpachap cussicuinin, first christian hymn in Quechua language (Juan Pérez de Bocanegra, 1631, Kingdom of Perú)

About the Artists

Ariel Bybee Endowment Winners 2023

Sister-and-brother artists from Buenos Aires, Susana and Gonzalo Silva, were selected as the 2023 Prize winners of the Ariel Bybee Endowment at the Center, an annual award that rotates between 9 artistic categories.

The 2023 prize theme was visual artwork, inspired by a specific piece of music of the artist’s choosing. Their winning proposal referenced a fellow Argentinean and female pioneer of electroacoustic music in Latin America, Hilda Dianda (b. 1925). Dianda’s Dos Estudios en Oposición (“Two Studies in Opposition,” 1959) was intended for magnetic tape. Likewise, the Silvas’ proposal was conceived as a mixed-media installation exploring two distinct research frameworks: the dialogue between graphical music notation and its relationship with contemporary visual art; and a review of Latin American, female representation within the canon of contemporary musical history.

Ariel Bybee & The Endowment at the Center

Learn more about Ariel Bybee’s legacy and the multi-disciplinary endowment.

Acknowledgements

Ariel Bybee Endowment Committee

Neylan McBaine
Patrick Perkins
Jamie Peterson

Donors to the Ariel Bybee Endowment

Allegra LaViola, owner, Sargent's Daughters Gallery

For the Center for Latter-day Saint Arts

Glen Nelson, Director of Special Projects
Mykal Urbina, Executive Director
Veronica Harvey, Director of Marketing and Communications

2023 Ariel Bybee Endowment Jury

Georgina Bringas, artist
Kent Christensen, artist
Janalee Emmer, director, Brigham Young University Museum of Art
Campbell Gray, retired director, The University of Queensland Art Museum
Allegra LaViola, owner and director, Sargent’s Daughters
Neylan McBaine, CEO, Duet Partner
Kah Poon, photographer
Warren Winegar, art advisor, Winegar Fine Art