Swamp Club
Acrylic, ink, watercolor, oil stick and coffee on raw canvas mounted within a walnut frame.
Pinney created a Spotify playlist built around the series:
click here to listen.
Music, like art, is a universal language: It grounds, inspires, provokes, heals, agitates, saddens, and uplifts every living soul. To Pinney, it is one of life’s greatest indulgences and it connects us to others, our environment, and to ourselves deeply. Finding a new favorite song, for Pinney, is almost as good a feeling as hearing one that transports her back in time — as it does many of us. It’s a universal sensation similar to smelling food that reminds you of your childhood home, or meeting someone and feeling you’ve known them your whole life. It’s a powerful tool in navigating a decision, a log in your fire when you’re angry, or a desperate hug when you’re enveloped in loneliness. Through her new series of printed works, Pinney conveys the feeling that music makes life make sense. It makes moments more memorable and wakes up old memories. The nostalgia and presence music evokes is powerful and often unsuspecting — the catalyst that can drop you into a moment and slow your nervous system or demand your body to move. For Caroline Pinney, she can associate some of her most memorable experiences with a particular song or album, remembering the stack of 60’s, 70’s, and 80’s CDs her dad gave her as a kid and listening to them on the floor of her room via a daisy-painted Walkman. All of her life, she says, she has looked to music to inform unformed thoughts, quiet chaos, foster deep connections, and to guide her visual voice.
View the Exhibition
Plan Your Visit
Be in the Know About Artwork Launches & Artist News
This service is currently unavailable,
sorry for the inconvenience.
Pair it with a frame
Frame options are for visualization purposes only.
FRAME STYLE
MATTING SIZE
BUILDING YOUR EXPERIENCE
powered by Blankwall
Take a few steps back and let your camera see more of the scene.
powered by Blankwall
Was this experience helpful?
Pinney created a Spotify playlist built around the series:
click here to listen.
Music, like art, is a universal language: It grounds, inspires, provokes, heals, agitates, saddens, and uplifts every living soul. To Pinney, it is one of life’s greatest indulgences and it connects us to others, our environment, and to ourselves deeply. Finding a new favorite song, for Pinney, is almost as good a feeling as hearing one that transports her back in time — as it does many of us. It’s a universal sensation similar to smelling food that reminds you of your childhood home, or meeting someone and feeling you’ve known them your whole life. It’s a powerful tool in navigating a decision, a log in your fire when you’re angry, or a desperate hug when you’re enveloped in loneliness. Through her new series of printed works, Pinney conveys the feeling that music makes life make sense. It makes moments more memorable and wakes up old memories. The nostalgia and presence music evokes is powerful and often unsuspecting — the catalyst that can drop you into a moment and slow your nervous system or demand your body to move. For Caroline Pinney, she can associate some of her most memorable experiences with a particular song or album, remembering the stack of 60’s, 70’s, and 80’s CDs her dad gave her as a kid and listening to them on the floor of her room via a daisy-painted Walkman. All of her life, she says, she has looked to music to inform unformed thoughts, quiet chaos, foster deep connections, and to guide her visual voice.
Artwork Information
Year
2024
Materials
Acrylic, ink, watercolor, oil stick and coffee on raw canvas mounted within a walnut frame.
Authentication
Signed by Artist
The work comes with a Certification of Authenticity signed by the Co-Founder of Tappan
Dimensions
60 x 72 inches
FRAMED DIMENSIONS
60 x 72 inches
Custom Orders
We offer a wide variety of custom framing options, please reach out for more information.
Shipping times vary per artwork, text, email, or chat with us to expedite shipping.
text: 310-388-3425
email: [email protected]
Art Advising Services
Complimentary art advising services available on request. More info here
“Enhance / Disrupt ultimately speaks to physical awareness with regards to the company we keep—both good and poor.”
About the Artist
Caroline Pinney
Caroline Pinney is a contemporary figurative artist whose work primarily explores intimacy and human relationships. Since receiving her BFA, the artist has lived in Nashville, Richmond, and is now based in Austin—and is energized by the warmer weather. The landscapes and robust art and music scenes of each city have propelled her curiosity and independence, instilling lyricism and movement into her work. Pinney's work has been featured in Vanity Fair UK and The Scout Guide: Richmond.
Choose options
View the Exhibition
Plan Your Visit
This service is currently unavailable,
sorry for the inconvenience.
Pair it with a frame
Frame options are for visualization purposes only.
FRAME STYLE
MATTING SIZE
BUILDING YOUR EXPERIENCE
powered by Blankwall
Take a few steps back and let your camera see more of the scene.
powered by Blankwall
Was this experience helpful?
Pinney created a Spotify playlist built around the series:
click here to listen.
Music, like art, is a universal language: It grounds, inspires, provokes, heals, agitates, saddens, and uplifts every living soul. To Pinney, it is one of life’s greatest indulgences and it connects us to others, our environment, and to ourselves deeply. Finding a new favorite song, for Pinney, is almost as good a feeling as hearing one that transports her back in time — as it does many of us. It’s a universal sensation similar to smelling food that reminds you of your childhood home, or meeting someone and feeling you’ve known them your whole life. It’s a powerful tool in navigating a decision, a log in your fire when you’re angry, or a desperate hug when you’re enveloped in loneliness. Through her new series of printed works, Pinney conveys the feeling that music makes life make sense. It makes moments more memorable and wakes up old memories. The nostalgia and presence music evokes is powerful and often unsuspecting — the catalyst that can drop you into a moment and slow your nervous system or demand your body to move. For Caroline Pinney, she can associate some of her most memorable experiences with a particular song or album, remembering the stack of 60’s, 70’s, and 80’s CDs her dad gave her as a kid and listening to them on the floor of her room via a daisy-painted Walkman. All of her life, she says, she has looked to music to inform unformed thoughts, quiet chaos, foster deep connections, and to guide her visual voice.