Archipelago is an installation that comes from the Ocean project carried out in conjunction with the artist Fernando Godoy. The project is based on the exploration of underwater landscape realities and the encounter with communities of the Chiloé islands. The project included a series of sound and visual records of the landscape, radio and streaming transmissions, meetings and work spaces with residents of the islands of Quehui, Apiao and Mechuque, as well as the rescue of testimonies of insular life forms in ways of disappearance. Archipiélago is a project that from the sound investigation explores the consequences of economic extractivism in the underwater environment, as well as the cultural and social changes produced in territories of extreme isolation. The sound installation is presented as a set of three geographies / water container islands, where a hydrophone operates, automated, entering and leaving the water to capture submerged sound files and transmit them to a series of FM radios present in the same room. These sounds are only perceptible by the hydrophone, the island-hydrophone system being a physical sound mixer that allows the submerged sound recordings associated with each island to be combined and made audible. The ear, Dxarts, University of Washington