The website of Tremenheere Sculpture Gardens, a park which tries to "implement" contemporary art in the beautiful natural environmental of West Cornwall, describes James Turrell's Skyspace, one of the most interesting installation in the gardens, by highlighting the fact that "the shifting balance between the interior and exterior light will provide a contemplative and hypnotic transition". This interesting installation could be described as a chamber with a more or less wide (round, square or ovular) aperture on the top of the ceiling, which can be an autonomous structure or can be integrated into pre-existing buildings. That lovely corner of Cornwall is the place where the Ireland-based Australian sound artist Robert Curvengen experienced this building by Mr.Turrel, whose usage and perception of space and light was mainly aimed to be a sort of filter in order to perceive the sky in an enhanced way, but besides the perception of space and light, Robert should have been impressed by its acoustics to the point that he asked for Turrell's permission to check some of his Skyspaces around the world in order to grab the external sound by means of a set of microphones and some custom-made oscillators in order to create slightly manipulated sounds and check the way they could highlight the resonance inside any Skyspace. Each of the 15 Skyspaces became a sort of diaphragm between the sound that Robert generated inside of it and the sounds from the outer space, but the aspect, which makes the final listening experience that got provided on this double CD by L.A.-based label Dragon's Eye Recordings even more interesting, is the recording technique used on Climata. The initial tones - vaguely sounding like binaural tones - are a by-product of a technique by which a set of oscillators got stimulated by the movement of the air inside each chamber against the air outside and their amalgamation emphasizes that above-mentioned "contemplative and hypnotic transition", which could be provided by Turrell's entities. The author suggests to play - back to back or simultaneously) the two 58 minutes lasting CDs on two different sound systems to enjoy the multiple combinations that could rise from such a way of playing.