Good thing you didn’t cut your ear off.
Try The Ninth Wave by Aivazovsky next. But if you want a neutral presentation Malevich’s Black Square is hard to beat.
Sonic correlations with art in the listening space
I’ve been doing some serious listening room optimization lately and wanted to share some findings that I think will genuinely move the needle for people.
I started with a Van Gogh Starry Night print on the front wall. The effect was immediately apparent — the soundstage became more active and forward, treble took on an aggressive, almost agitated quality, and there was a swirling, turbulent energy in the upper midrange that I can only describe as "post-impressionistic." Bass was present but restless. Not unpleasant, but fatiguing over long sessions.
I swapped in a Monet Water Lilies — same frame, same wall position, same listening chair. The transformation was remarkable. Highs rolled off beautifully, the whole presentation became more diffuse and liquid, with a kind of shimmering quality in the upper frequencies that never hardened. Soundstage depth increased noticeably. Jazz and classical particularly benefited. Vocals floated with an almost pond-like serenity.
I’m currently experimenting with a Rothko — early results suggest a warm, enveloping midrange with somewhat ill-defined edges, though the color temperature of the piece may be a confounding variable. A Mondrian is on order and I’m expecting tight, articulate bass with excellent channel separation.
Has anyone else explored this? I feel like the art/acoustics interaction is seriously underexplored in this hobby. Would love to hear other findings. Measurements welcome but I’m not sure the Klippel can capture this yet.
P.S. But seriously – I AM curious about the effect of decor on your overall listening experiences. I am making a joke above, but I do spend time tweaking my lighting and other things and seeing how impacts of visual art on mood effect listening experience.
I agree that personally meaningful decoration is part of the listening experience. I made absorption panels with printed fabric from my photos. I also framed some old concert flyers. And then there is the original Mark Tobey lithography called "Music II" [no joke]. Then there is record-art. That includes the Friendship editions of Eins.Zwei.Acht label (I think I have five of them: one of them here), and the art edition of Volcan’s "Chanson pour le Néant" (see here ). It sits on a side table made from a Carrom board with a glass cover. |
Great topic. I'll take aesthetically pleasing room with nice looking speakers placed best as possible over SOTA "listening room." I can appreciate the quest, but a windowless room filled with acoustic treatment isn't my thing for my own space. Gladly sacrifice ultimate sound for a great view, nice furnishings, art and plants. When timed right, I can view the fireworks display while blasting the 1812 or a Zeppelin cut👍 |