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- Jodendom en paganisme — standpunt Poster
- Strawberry Thief Poster
- Matisse Dansende figuren Poster
- Vrouw met de rug naar de kijker Poster
- Rood haar, blauwe hoed Poster
- Park nabij Lu Poster
- El Comienzo Poster
- Parler Seul 2 Poster
- The Current Standpoint of the Mahatmas Poster
- Twilight’s Ring Poster
- Parler Seul Poster
- The Dream poster
- Vogel vliegend door een wolk Poster
- Vrouw en vogel 's nachts Poster
- Grote Golf van Kanagawa Poster
- Hibiscus Poster
- Vreugdevolle berglandschap Poster
- Hoofd van een vrouw Poster
- Beethovenfries Poster
- Auf Weiss II Poster
- Cirkels in een cirkel Poster
- Dieprode Poster
- Transmission Poster
- Oranje Poster
- Lichtcirkel Poster
- Bleu de Ciel Poster
- Ontwerp voor een muurschildering Poster
- Papiers découpés 5 Poster
- Papiers découpés 4 Poster
- Papiers découpés 3 Poster
- Papiers découpés 2 Poster
- Papiers découpés 1 Poster
- Arbalète I Poster
- Le Modulor Poster
- Métamorphose du violon Poster
- Le rêve Poster
- Oranje Poster
- Lichtcirkel Poster
- Bleu de Ciel Poster
- Ontwerp voor een muurschildering Poster
- Papiers découpés 5 Poster
- Papiers découpés 4 Poster
- Papiers découpés 3 Poster
- Papiers découpés 2 Poster
- Papiers découpés 1 Poster
- Arbalète I Poster
- Le Modulor Poster
- Métamorphose du violon Poster
- Le rêve Poster
- Sterrenbeelden Poster
- Yayoi zwart-wit Poster
- Der Blaue Reiter Poster
- Vrouw in oranjerode jurk Poster
- Vrije vormen Poster
- De twee verdwaalden Poster
- Kleurrijke Architectuur Poster
- Zuidelijke tuinen Poster
- Meditatie Poster
- Rozen Poster
- Badende jongens Poster
- Eeuwige Liefde Poster
- Abstracte hoofd Poster
- Mystiek hoofd Poster
- Zelfportret Poster
- Irissen Poster
- Portret van Joseph Roulin Poster
- Giftige bessen Poster







































A cabinet of modern masters
In the Famous Artists collection, a poster can act like a portable museum: late nineteenth-century symbolism, Arts and Crafts pattern, Bauhaus clarity, and postwar cut-paper experiments sharing the same wall. The thread is not one school but a shared belief that line and color communicate as directly as words. These vintage prints also show how art learned to travel, from exhibition announcements to workshop-made patterns, becoming decoration that still carries its original cultural charge.
Reproduction, craft, and the public image
Many of these images were designed for reproducibility, which is why their compositions stay legible at a distance. Gustav Klimt turned figure and ornament into a single surface in The Kiss (1907–1908), where gold and pattern behave almost like textile design. Japanese woodblock tradition pushed a different kind of precision: Katsushika Hokusai’s The Great Wave off Kanagawa (c. 1830) is a lesson in rhythm and negative space, with Mt. Fuji reduced to an anchoring triangle. For a closer look at related sensibilities, the Classic Art and Oriental collections trace how craft techniques and modern graphic design kept borrowing from each other.
Color, light, and where each print belongs
Use light first, then color. North-facing rooms tend to flatten warm pigments, so Klimt-like golds, terracottas, and pinks can restore depth, while a bright hallway can handle cooler, pale modernism without looking washed out. If your space already has heavy pattern, reach for cleaner shapes from Abstract or a restrained palette from Black & White so the wall art reads as structure rather than additional texture. Dining corners often suit patterned work, where a Morris-inspired print can echo ceramics and linen; bedrooms benefit from quieter contrasts, letting paper tone and line quality do the decorating.
Gallery walls: scale, spacing, and frames
A strong gallery wall relies on rhythm more than volume. Place one dense, narrative image as the visual bass note, then add lighter pieces that give the eye pauses. William Morris’s Strawberry Thief (1883) carries a woven density that sits well beside open, analytic compositions such as Wassily Kandinsky’s Circles in a Circle (1923). For figure-based tension, the angular line of Egon Schiele introduces human charge without needing loud color. Match frames to the dominant texture: pale oak complements Morris patterning, while black or aluminum reinforces Kandinsky’s geometry; generous matting helps the print feel intentional rather than crowded.
One room, several centuries of ideas
What lasts in these posters is the clarity of decisions: where to compress detail into ornament, where to let white space breathe, and how to build a whole image from a few repeatable forms. Henri Matisse’s Nu Bleu II shows that economy especially well, using cut-paper simplification to keep the figure both decorative and direct. If you want to extend the dialogue, move between William Morris and Bauhaus to see pattern and modernism negotiate the same question: how art becomes livable wall art without losing its edge.





































