Curated for the Dining Room
Art for the Dining Room
Editorial wall art for the dining room — confident still lifes, food and drink prints, large-format abstracts and curated sets that turn the dining wall into a focal point. Printed on demand, framed and ready to hang.

Squeeze The Day
From £13
Pearl Reimagined
From £13
Gandhi and the Spinning Wheel — Margaret Bourke-White
From £13
Slay Queen Portrait
From £13
Crimson Flow
From £13
A Bigger Splash — David Hockney
From £13
Self-Portrait (at 28) — Albrecht Dürer
From £13
Paloma Cocktail Recipe
From £13
Abstract Earthy Harmony
From £13
Abstract Fire and Ice
From £13
A Plea for Peace
From £13
Woman Embracing Nature
From £13
Squares with Concentric Circles — Wassily Kandinsky
From £13
Crimson Horizon Metropolis
From £13
Pale Blue Dot — Voyager 1 (NASA)
From £13
Portrait of a Young Man with a Medal — Sandro Botticelli
From £13
Season's Greetings
From £13
Shattered Light Fragments
From £13
Slow Living Typography
From £13
The Resurrection — Piero della Francesca
From £13
The Little Mermaid — Edvard Eriksen
From £13
Pale Blue Dot — NASA/Voyager 1
From £13
Oceanic Brushstroke Abstract
From £13
Show Me the Monet
From £13
Self-Portrait with Cropped Hair — Frida Kahlo
From £13
The Peasant Wedding — Pieter Bruegel the Elder
From £13
Afghan Girl — Steve McCurry
From £13
Cosmic Consciousness
From £13
The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife — Katsushika Hokusai
From £13
Excavation — Willem de Kooning
From £13
Quantum Flux Cubes
From £13
Forgive Us Our Trespassing
From £13
Hara: Morning Fuji — Utagawa Hiroshige
From £13
Improvisation 7 — Wassily Kandinsky
From £13
Speed Demon Splash
From £13
Ram's Head, White Hollyhock and Little Hills — Georgia O'Keeffe
From £13
Speed Demon Motorcycle
From £13
A Lady Standing at a Virginal — Johannes Vermeer
From £13
Abstract Geometric Stack
From £13
Belshazzar's Feast — Rembrandt van Rijn
From £13
Apparition of Face and Fruit Dish on a Beach — Salvador Dalí
From £13
Samson and Delilah — Peter Paul Rubens
From £13
Kritios Boy — Kritios
From £13
Abstract Swirl of Color
From £13
Ocean Blue Swash
From £13
The Horse in Motion — Eadweard Muybridge
From £13
Flowing Gestures
From £13
Neon Light Radiance
From £13
No. 61 (Rust and Blue) — Mark Rothko
From £13The Okawall guide
How to choose dining room wall art
49 curated prints in this edit — printed on demand on canvas, framed paper, brushed metal and luminous acrylic. Free carbon-neutral worldwide shipping on every order.
Wall art for the dining room carries more weight than any other piece in the room — it sits at eye level, frames the conversation, and decides whether the whole space feels finished or floating. Our dining room edit is curated for exactly that job: pieces that scale to the wall, that read clearly from across the room, and that argue gently with the furniture instead of competing with it.
Size to the largest piece of furniture
Whatever you hang in the dining room should be roughly two-thirds the width of the dominant furniture below it — sofa, bed, console, dining table. Smaller than that and the art floats; wider and it competes.
Hang it lower than you think
The bottom edge of the art should land 15–25 cm above the furniture it hangs above. The single most common interior mistake is hanging everything 20 cm too high.
Match the room's energy
Loud dining rooms want quiet art; quiet dining rooms want one confident piece. The goal is a finished room, not a busy one.