Museum-quality archival prints in the following sizes:
60 × 45 cm (Edition: 25 + 3 artist's proofs), €6,000
80 × 60 cm (Edition: 15 + 2 artist's proofs), €9,000
120 × 90 cm (Edition: 10 + 2 artist’s proofs), €13,000
180 × 135 cm (Edition: 5 + 2 artist’s proofs), €22,000
In TINA TRUMPP’s works, the piano and the human body engage in a silent dialogue. What begins as sound takes on form; what begins as a glance transforms into rhythm. The pianist, caught between concentration and devotion, embodies the fragile balance of discipline and emotion. Her hands, tracing melodies across the keys, mirror the lines and curves of the body—both are instruments of profound expressiveness, beyond language.
The nude, often reduced in art history to an object of desire, is reinterpreted here as a state of authenticity—as a return to the essential. In TINA TRUMPP’s photographs, nudity is not exposure but liberation: a visual resonance of the inner tone that music itself evokes. The body becomes an instrument of truth, gently oscillating between strength and sensitivity.
Light, shadow, and skin compose new symphonies of intimacy. Each image carries within it a form of stillness—a pause between the notes, in which emotion reverberates and breath becomes visible. In this fusion of sensuality and spirituality, Trumpp reveals the invisible music of being—subtle, delicate, and deeply human.
Museum-quality archival prints in the following sizes:
60 × 45 cm (Edition: 25 + 3 artist's proofs), €6,000
80 × 60 cm (Edition: 15 + 2 artist's proofs), €9,000
120 × 90 cm (Edition: 10 + 2 artist’s proofs), €13,000
180 × 135 cm (Edition: 5 + 2 artist’s proofs), €22,000
In TINA TRUMPP’s works, the piano and the human body engage in a silent dialogue. What begins as sound takes on form; what begins as a glance transforms into rhythm. The pianist, caught between concentration and devotion, embodies the fragile balance of discipline and emotion. Her hands, tracing melodies across the keys, mirror the lines and curves of the body—both are instruments of profound expressiveness, beyond language.
The nude, often reduced in art history to an object of desire, is reinterpreted here as a state of authenticity—as a return to the essential. In TINA TRUMPP’s photographs, nudity is not exposure but liberation: a visual resonance of the inner tone that music itself evokes. The body becomes an instrument of truth, gently oscillating between strength and sensitivity.
Light, shadow, and skin compose new symphonies of intimacy. Each image carries within it a form of stillness—a pause between the notes, in which emotion reverberates and breath becomes visible. In this fusion of sensuality and spirituality, Trumpp reveals the invisible music of being—subtle, delicate, and deeply human.