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

@mapman 

Hmmm maybe I should take down that 3 stooges poster on the wall. 🤔

I also have some family portraits in my listening area. I say keep it up.


@imintohifi 

Thanks for your comments. I agree with the idea that we should pay attention to everything involved in the experience if we can. A whole complex combines to make the experience for me. Sometimes I do close my eyes, but I start from and return to a certain space, with certain atmospherics.

I wonder if anyone here has added smell to the equation – an infuser with nice scents? That would be another experiment in synethesia and/or atmosphere.

@toddalin 

And apparently I'm doing something right because the soundstage, imaging, and sense of realism are like no others I've heard at any of the shops or shows.

I listened to your clip – I'm amazed, but your system sounds just like my macbook's speakers! 

@hilde45 

You need to listen over a good set of nearfield monitors or headphones.

Why would anyone who frequents a "High Fidelity" website use anything less?  surprise

@toddalin Cool! Ok, so I put on some good headphones with their own amp, and your speaker sound just like my headphones! Why would anyone who frequents a "High Fidelity" website want a speaker system to sound like anything else?

@hilde45 

Or is it that your headphones sound like my system..., as they should?

Otherwise, everything you listen too over your headphones sounds just like your headphones regardless of the source.  Do your headphones have a specific sound that maybe you prefer, or do they just sort of disappear?

I know that I digress from the topic here (i.e., art), but tell me that these three tracks all sound the same..., "like your headphones" and I would say get some new headphones!

https://youtu.be/P1R2dKRDFUk

https://youtu.be/Lz2EIU2th2A?list=RDLz2EIU2th2A

https://youtu.be/tTs9XIbELts

Anyway, on topic, the video was too show how the pictures on the right side front wall are placed to "mirror" the glasswork on the left side.