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.


hilde45

I don't know what good this would do if the serious listening is done with eyes closed.  Nevertheless, I am inspired to get some new art to try.  

Architect Digest aesthetic + a pair of speakers with the goal of nearing audiophool SQ-is that possible?

Mindful speaker design choice and S.O. approval can get you there😂

Personally, I'd like to be able to look out at the trees and sky. Being in a windowless space makes it harder to want to go isolate in. But the basement's concrete floor does a lot of good for being low vibration.

Aesthetically, I suppose I prefer dim lighting and a painting without much meaningful content -- the more abstract the better. Let the music bring the meanings.

It’s nice to have a nice room to listen in. 
 

You get to decide what is “nice”.

You get to decide what is “nice”. 

That's either super straightforward or really inscrutable.