An Abstract Wall Art Edit, With a Couple of Exceptions

Wall art has a habit of being an afterthought — the furniture goes in first, the lighting gets sorted, and a print gets hung at the end almost because the wall looks bare. It shows. This edit is built the other way round: a genuine range of abstract prints strong enough to anchor a room, with two carefully chosen exceptions for anyone after something more representational.

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The Abstract Core

Eight of the ten pieces in this collection are abstract prints, and they span a genuinely wide range of moods rather than repeating the same look in different colourways.

Abstract Wall Art is the collection's namesake piece and a solid entry point if you're not sure which direction to go — a balanced, versatile abstract composition that works in most rooms without dominating them.

Abstract Wall Art | Untamed Majesty leans bolder and more expressive — the pick if you want your wall art to genuinely command attention rather than sit quietly in the background.

Abstract Wall Art | Neutral Tones is the opposite instinct: a muted, tonal palette designed to add texture and depth to a room without introducing a strong new colour. This is the safest choice if you're decorating around an already-settled colour scheme.

Abstract Wall Art | Stacked Harmony brings a more structured, layered composition — good for spaces that want a sense of order and calm rather than energy.

Abstract Wall Art | Vivid Reverie is the most colour-forward piece in the range, closer in spirit to Untamed Majesty but with a dreamier, less graphic quality.

The Bauhaus Trio

Three pieces in the collection form a distinct sub-series: Bauhaus Edition, Bauhaus Exhibition, and Bauhaus Ausstellung all draw on the geometric, primary-colour clarity associated with the Bauhaus design movement — clean shapes, confident colour blocking, and a distinctly graphic feel. Because these three share a visual language, they're worth considering as a genuine set rather than one-off picks: displayed together on a single wall, or spread through connected rooms, they'll read as a deliberate design choice rather than three unrelated prints.

How to Choose Between Them

Decide abstract or representational first, before you look at colour. This is the single biggest fork in this collection. Abstract prints (the eight pieces above) suit contemporary, minimalist, or design-led spaces. The vintage portrait and tulip canvas suit rooms that want warmth and narrative rather than shape and colour theory.

If you're drawn to the Bauhaus trio, consider displaying more than one. Because they share a visual language, two or three of them together — on one wall or across a hallway — will look considerably more intentional than any single abstract print hung alone.

Size relative to the wall, not the furniture below it. A common mistake is sizing art to match a piece of furniture underneath — a print that looks proportionate above a narrow console can look lost on an otherwise bare wall. As a rough guide, art should span roughly 60-75% of the furniture's width beneath it, or go noticeably larger if the wall itself is empty.

Let your room's existing focal point guide the choice. If a room already has a strong visual anchor — a striking light fixture, a bold headboard — your wall art doesn't need to compete. In that case, Neutral Tones or the vintage portrait print will sit more comfortably than Untamed Majesty or Vivid Reverie.


Browse the full Wall Art collection, and if you're deciding between pieces for a specific room, our contact page is always open for advice before you buy.