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In the run-up to the traveling exhibition Land.schafft.Klang (https://landschafftklang.de/), filmmaker Dieter Wieland, Dr. Rudolf Neumaier, managing director of the Bavarian State Association for Homeland Preservation, and Lioba Degenfelder, curator of the traveling exhibition, met for a meadow discussion. The exhibition, which opens its doors in March 2024 in the Glentleiten open-air museum, is dedicated to the sound of Bavarian meadows and pastures and focuses on the topics of agricultural landscapes and species loss. It goes on a two-year journey across Bavaria. You can find more information here: https://landschafftklang.de/ What is the traveling exhibition about? Wind, water, animals, plants and man-made sounds create the individual sound of a landscape. By listening carefully, we can discover the living environment of our "landscape co-inhabitants". Open your ears - and suddenly there's a lot going on around us! With the loss of species-rich habitats, we not only lose important species, but also the sound of unique natural orchestras. If we follow their sounds, new questions arise: What does the ground beneath our feet sound like? What does research know about the sound of the landscape? Can we hear differences in management? What happens when we invite artists to a meadow concert? And what does it sound like to say goodbye to species that we are losing? If you are interested in the traveling exhibition, please contact: Michaela Metz Project Coordination Land.schafft.Klang Bavarian State Association for the Care of Local History e. V. Ludwigstraße 23 Rgb. 80539 Munich [email protected] https://landschafftklang.de/