On Aug. 1, from 5 to 9 p.m., the Artpothecary in West Rehoboth invites you to step into something different – an experience not meant to be owned, but felt. Piano Walk, the latest installation by multidisciplinary artist Claudia Lamy, offers a rare encounter with experimental, sound-driven art at the Delaware beaches.
Rooted in intuitive piano compositions that Lamy began sharing in 2016, Piano Walk has evolved into a deeply personal series – an invitation to pause, listen, and let your imagination lead. This is not traditional gallery art. This is a space where boundaries dissolve: between viewer and artist, sound and sight, inner world and outer environment. Through a fusion of 2D, 3D, 4D, and augmented reality elements, Lamy weaves surreal, contemplative spaces that ask you not just to look, but to feel.
This kind of work is rare here. Our region – known more for paintings of coastal charm or handmade crafts – doesn’t often showcase immersive installations like this. But Piano Walk makes a case for why it should. Art that isn’t made for the marketplace but for the moment – art that isn’t a product but a process – challenges us to experience beauty without needing to frame it, own it, or explain it. In a world constantly demanding clarity and productivity, this kind of open-ended creative space can be revolutionary.
Claudia Lamy’s background – spanning business, design, and human development – informs her multidimensional approach. Her work builds participatory environments where structure and spontaneity meet. It’s surreal but never inaccessible. It’s art meant to be entered – physically, emotionally, and intuitively.
Whether you’re a seasoned collector or simply curious, Piano Walk offers something unexpected. Join us Friday, Aug. 1, from 5 to 9 p.m. at the Artpothecary in West Rehoboth, and walk through sound together.