14 Green Wall Art Secrets Only The Best Decorators Know About
The green wall art color is associated with life, vitality, growth, hope, and youth. It is also about being bright, young, and having a positive outlook on life.
There are many ways to infuse green wall art into your home or office.
According to some, green wall art has a more tranquil effect on the surrounding environment. In addition, it promotes a relaxed mood.
Green wall art can have both a warming and a cooling effect. Green is the color that represents harmony, balance, and security. Green is also calming and represents hope, peace, and gentleness.
Here is the wall art green selection:
1. Wall Art Gallery Set Entryway and Lounge Inspo
Wall Art Gallery Set Entryway and Lounge Inspo
Wall art gallery set entryway and lounge inspo with black wooden frames produced from natural pine/oak wood.
Wall art gallery set with FSC-certified premium quality art print made of the responsibly sourced wood fiber. Get inspired by our wall art collage ideas.
2. Klimt's Green Feelings wall art set of 3
Black Wooden frames are produced from natural pine/oak wood.
Wall art gallery set with FSC-certified premium quality art print made of the responsibly sourced wood fiber. Get inspired by our wall art collage ideas.
3. Before the Race (1887) by Edgar Degas
Before the Race (1887) by Edgar Degas
When asked why he loved painting ballerinas, Degas answered ''My chief interest lies in rendering movements and painting pretty clothes.'' Degas discovered that these criteria could be met with horses as well.
After discovering his love for horses, he started studying them at an anatomical level to understand the workings of horses fully. This obsession led him to create over 45 oil paintings, 20 pastel paintings, 250 drawings, and 17 sculptures of horses. However, before the Race is our favorite of all these different works!
4. Branch (1872) by William Morris
Branch (1872) by William Morris
Morris's depiction of the tree branch is one of color and a classic pattern that is recognizable as a work of Morris which we have grown to know and love for its simplicity and influence on nature.
5. Cupid Inspiring Plants with Love (1807) by Robert John Thornton
Cupid Inspiring Plants with Love (1807) by Robert John Thornton
This print by Thornton is a bit different from his usual work, and he usually focuses his artistic skill and craft on depicting one particular plant where the background is not the priority of the work. However, with this work, we see a drastic difference as there is not one singular plant in focus but several of them in the jungle-like environment, and the mythological character of cupid accompanies them.
6. Farm Garden with Sunflowers (1907) by Gustav Klimt
Farm Garden with Sunflowers (1907) by Gustav Klimt
Klimt often studied the works of van Gogh; looking at Farm Garden with Sunflowers, it's not hard to see. The use of sunflowers and contrasting colors of flowers versus the green background constructed by loose brushstrokes creates an excellent naturalistic print.
7. Exotic Landscape (1910) by Henri Rousseau
Exotic Landscape (1910) by Henri Rousseau
Rousseau's most famous and celebrated works were the ones that were jungle-inspired, and it is also the reason why he is called a primitive artist.
However, what's interesting about this is that Rousseau had never been in a jungle environment! He created these images purely out of imagination, and he listened to his friends in the military that had been in Mexico and visited the botanical garden in Paris. Based on this, he used his imagination to create jungle images, which makes his creations even more inspiring!
So from his imagination, he created animals, fruits, and jungles, and he did so in beautiful colors to create a tropical setting!
8. Garden (1935) by Pierre Bonnard
Garden (1935) by Pierre Bonnard
Bonnard had the ability to mix the impressionist style of art with modern, like a few others, so when he portrayed a classical subject like a garden, he did so with strong and radiating colors with his own playful and careless approach that resulted in magnificently beautiful works.
9. Green Wheat Field With Cypress (1889) by Vincent van Gogh
Green Wheat Field With Cypress (1889) by Vincent van Gogh
Like many of van Gogh's works, they were painted during his extremely productive time at the mental asylum in Saint-Rémy. This work is no different, as it was painted from the inspiration of van Gogh's nearby environment. We may notice the use of cypresses, which he loved very much and even expressed so in his letters to his brother Theo van Gogh.
10. Irises by Claude Monet
Monet had a strong love for irises and planted and cultivated several of them in his garden and water gardens in Giverny. With almost 20 paintings containing irises, they are one of his favorite subjects. Artists like van Gogh also loved the plant, and it is not hard to see why; the combination of green and blue creates something truly exceptional!
11. La Prairie (1880) by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
La Prairie (1880) by Pierre-Auguste Renoir
At first glance, we might believe this is a classical impressionist landscape painting filled with loose brushstrokes and vivid colors. However, if we look closely, we'll notice a woman with a child as they're walking through the field, much look all of Renoir's works, we often have to take a closer look to deepen our understanding of what he is trying to tell us beyond the money beautiful layers of color.
12. Port-en-Bessin, Normandy (1888) by Georges Seurat
Port-en-Bessin, Normandy (1888) by Georges Seurat
Just like the impressionist Claude Monet, Georges Seurat also enjoyed traveling to Normandie to enjoy the beautiful landscape and paint it. However, unlike Monet, the Neo-Impressionist Seurat didn't want his paintings to be so spontaneous and clearer and precise. Something which he achieved very well with his almost post-card-like paintings.
13. The Girls on the Bridge (1918) by Edvard Munch
The Girls on the Bridge (1918) by Edvard Munch
The work depicts the classical bridge you can find in Åsgårdstrand, the location of Munch's home outside of Oslo that he visited to find peace and focus on his creativity. Munch often painted works often depicted subjects suffering from anxiety to express their own; however, ''Girls on the Bridge'' shows us a harmonious moment in the Norweigan summer where the girls stop to take a moment for inner reflection and to admire the reflections on the water.
14. Window in the jungles by Kseniya Scher
Window in the jungles by Kseniya Scher
The artist's description of the artwork: During covid, I felt captured in lockdown; as I was limited to my home and unable to travel, I allowed myself to travel in my mind. I used to look out of my window and fantasize about seeing a warm jungle and tropical, and with this print, I wanted to share that feeling with the viewer.