Marco, You can make the painting analogy work with a bit of effort. The only thing you have to do is substitute the effect of light on a painting for the choice of playback equipment. First determine if the painting was made in a studio under natural light, incandescent light, flood ligh, spot light, flourscent light, flash light, candlelight, and the intensity of any of these, or if the painting was made outdoors in direct sunlight, partial shade, cloudy skys, flat light, and any other form of light you can think of. The painting is going to look different under each of these lighting conditions. All are color distortions - you must know what the artist used, or what light he expected you to use to view the painting to really get the picture. Absolutely critical to know these things! Thats why I hate going to museums, they never give you this information.
I wonder if our hairshirt audio friend is as dogmatic about his art appreciation as he is audio. :-)
Personally, I hang my hair shirt up when I got to bed. Its just too dammed itchy.
I wonder if our hairshirt audio friend is as dogmatic about his art appreciation as he is audio. :-)
Personally, I hang my hair shirt up when I got to bed. Its just too dammed itchy.