Collection: Abstract Wall Art

Abstract Wall Art

Abstract wall art gives you color, shape, and movement without tying the picture to any single object, which is what makes it such an easy fit for a modern home. There is no landscape to match to your window and no portrait to explain. Instead you get mood and rhythm, and a lot of room to read your own meaning into the piece. This collection runs across many looks, from calm neutral washes and soft earthy minimalism to bold geometric shapes, flowing pours of color, and sharp black and white contrast. Some people want one large piece to lead a room. Others want a set that ties a wall together. There is plenty here for either plan.

Why Abstract Art Works in a Home

Abstract designs are flexible in a way that representational art is not. A painting of a beach anchors a room to a theme, while a wash of blue and gold can read as sky, water, or pure color depending on the day and the light. That openness makes abstract pieces easy to live with, since they rarely fight the rest of your decor. They also carry mood well. Cool blues and grays feel calm and quiet, warm ochres and rust feel grounded and inviting, and strong black shapes on white feel graphic and awake. Because the design is not literal, you can hang the same piece in a traditional room or a sleek one and it will find its place in both.

Abstract Wall Art for Living Room Walls

The living room is where abstract art earns its keep. A piece for the living room tends to work best as one confident canvas over the sofa or on the wall you notice first when you walk in. A single large canvas gives the color and shape room to breathe, and it keeps the space feeling calm rather than busy. If your walls and furniture lean neutral, a piece with a shot of blue, ochre, or deep green becomes the anchor the room was missing. If your room already has strong color, choose an abstract that carries a hint of that same shade so the whole space reads as planned. Over a console or between two windows, a taller piece draws the eye up and makes the ceiling feel higher.

Large Abstract Wall Art for Big Spaces

Scale matters more with abstract art than with almost anything else. A small abstract on a big wall can look like an afterthought, while a large piece turns the same wall into a real feature. Over a long sofa or a wide sideboard, aim to fill roughly two thirds of the width of the furniture below. On a tall stairwell or a double height wall, a large vertical piece reaches up and claims the space. Large abstract wall art for living room settings works especially well when the surrounding walls stay simple, so the art reads as the main event rather than one item among many. If a single canvas cannot cover the span, a multi panel set spreads the design across the wall while the gaps keep it light.

Color Families to Choose From

Color is usually where people start, so it helps to know how the main families behave. Blue abstract wall art is calm and easy, since blue reads as restful and pairs with gray, white, wood, and warm metals without any effort. It suits bedrooms, offices, and living rooms you want to keep serene. Neutral abstract wall art in sand, cream, taupe, and soft gray is the safest choice of all, close to a textured neutral that finishes a wall without adding loud color. Black and white abstract wall art brings the sharpest contrast, graphic and clean, and it belongs in modern rooms with darker furniture or a monochrome scheme. Warmer palettes in terracotta, mustard, and rust feel grounded and cozy, while designs with a jolt of emerald, teal, or deep red give a quiet room a clear focus.

Styles Within Abstract Art

Abstract is a wide field, and the styles inside it suit different rooms. Modern abstract wall art leans on clean shapes, open space, and a restrained palette, which fits contemporary homes with simple lines. Wabi-sabi abstract wall art takes the opposite approach to polish, celebrating soft, imperfect, earthy forms and muted color, and it brings a calm, grounded feeling to a room that wants to slow down. Geometric abstracts use bold blocks, circles, and lines for a confident graphic look. Fluid designs, with pours, drips, and blended color, feel loose and painterly and add real movement to a wall. Minimalist pieces do the most with the least, a single mark or a quiet gradient, and they suit spaces where you want art without noise. Mixing one bold piece with one quiet piece on the same wall often looks better than matching everything exactly.

Choosing Abstract Wall Art by Room

Where a piece will live should shape what you pick. In a bedroom, softer abstracts in muted blues, blush, and warm neutrals keep the mood restful, and they hang well above a headboard or on the wall facing the bed. In a home office, a design with a little more energy, a jolt of color or a strong shape, helps the room stay awake through long days. In a dining room, a richer abstract in deep blue, plum, or forest green makes evenings feel warmer. Hallways and entryways take well to a tall, narrow piece that leads the eye along the wall. Match the intensity of the art to how the room is used, calm where you rest and livelier where you work, and the piece will feel right every time you pass it.

Sizes, Single Pieces, and Multi Panel Sets

Every design comes in a range of sizes, as a single canvas or as a multi panel set of three, four, or five pieces. A single large canvas gives an abstract the most impact and keeps the shape and color whole. Multi panel sets suit very wide walls, since the gaps between panels let a busy design breathe instead of flooding the room. For a gallery wall, a group of smaller abstracts in the same color family reads as a collection while giving you flexibility to add or move pieces over time. Whichever route you take, measure the wall first, mark the size out with painter's tape before you order, and step back to judge how it feels from across the room.

Matching Abstract Art to Your Decor

The simplest way to make an abstract look intentional is to repeat a color already in the space. If a cushion, a rug, or a vase carries a certain blue or ochre, a piece in that family will tie the room together at once. Warm rooms with wood, leather, and cream take to terracotta, rust, and mustard abstracts. Cooler rooms with gray, navy, and white handle blue, teal, and crisp black and white without any clash. Keep the wall around the piece fairly clear so the art stays the focus, since a busy arrangement around a strong abstract only competes with it. Give the piece some breathing room and let the color and shape lead.

New to Decorating With Abstract Art

If you have never hung an abstract before, start where the risk is low. A neutral or soft blue design is the gentlest way in, since quiet color is hard to get wrong and settles into a room without demanding attention. Hang it somewhere you pass often rather than the largest wall in the house, and give yourself a week to live with it before deciding whether to add more. Trust your own reaction over any rule. If a piece makes you pause when you walk by, it is doing its job, even if you cannot say exactly what it is meant to be. That freedom is the point of abstract art, and it is what makes it so forgiving to decorate with.

How Each Piece Is Made

Every abstract in this collection is printed to order on museum-quality canvas using archival inks that resist fading, so the color holds true through years of normal indoor light. Each canvas is stretched by hand over a solid wooden inner frame, which keeps the surface taut and the edges clean, and it arrives ready to hang with free US shipping. To care for a piece, keep it out of harsh direct sun and dust it now and then with a dry, soft cloth. Avoid cleaning sprays, which can mark the coating over time. Near a bathroom, choose a dry wall clear of steam so the canvas stays in good shape.

Abstract art is one of the easiest ways to finish a room, since it adds color and character without locking you into a theme. Start with a color you already love, choose a size that suits the wall, and lean toward calm pieces where you rest and bolder ones where you gather. For related looks, explore our modern wall art and high contrast black wall art, browse pieces made to hang over a sofa in our living room wall art collection, find calmer designs for a restful space in our bedroom wall art range, or bring in softer, organic shapes with nature wall art.

Common Questions

What abstract styles are available?

You can choose bold color splashes, soft flowing shapes, geometric designs, and metallic accents. They come as single panels or 3 to 5 piece multi-panel sets.

How do I use abstract art in a room?

Use a bold, oversized piece as a colorful focal point, or pick a calmer palette that ties in with your existing decor. Repeating one of its colors in a cushion or rug pulls the room together.

Which rooms suit abstract wall art?

Abstract art fits modern, traditional, and rustic rooms alike, working well in a living room, office, or entryway. A large multi-panel piece makes a striking statement wall.

1861 products
  • Earth & Sun from Space Canvas Wall Art
    Regular price
    $218.95
    Sale price
    $80.95
  • Milky Way Galaxy Canvas Wall Art
    Regular price
    $218.95
    Sale price
    $80.95
  • The Helix Nebula Eye of God Canvas Wall Art
    Regular price
    $218.95
    Sale price
    $80.95
  • Black Hole Sucking Nearest Star Canvas Wall Art
    Regular price
    $218.95
    Sale price
    $80.95
  • Custom 5 Panel Canvas Print | Personalized Split Star Canvas Wall Art
    Regular price
    $436.95
    Sale price
    $161.95
  • Supermassive Black Hole Canvas Wall Art
    Regular price
    $218.95
    Sale price
    $80.95
  • Andromeda Galaxy Over Earth Canvas Wall Art
    Regular price
    $218.95
    Sale price
    $80.95
  • Jupiter with Its Moons Canvas Wall Art
    Regular price
    $218.95
    Sale price
    $80.95
Go to full site