Curated for the Hallway
Art for the Hallway
Wall art for hallways, entryways and stairwells — vertical formats, gallery walls and long-format prints made to lead the eye down narrow walls and welcome guests at the door.

Couple in Raccoon Coats — James Van Der Zee
From £13
View from Mount Holyoke, Northampton, Massachusetts, after a Thunderstorm—The Oxbow — Thomas Cole
From £13
St Sebastian — Sandro Botticelli
From £13
Neon Night Santa Hacker
From £13
Minimal Intersection
From £13
Moai — Unknown
From £13
Adrenaline Rush
From £13
Coffee Pink Mug
From £13
Bauhaus Pink Exhibition
From £13
Light Coming on the Plains II — Georgia O'Keeffe
From £13
The Delphic Sibyl — Michelangelo
From £13
Desert Dune Forms
From £13
Living Still Life — Salvador Dalí
From £13
Dance at Bougival — Pierre-Auguste Renoir
From £13
The Fall of Man and Expulsion — Michelangelo
From £13
Sunlit Abstract Play
From £13
The Dessert: Harmony in Red — Henri Matisse
From £13
Clear Quartz Crystal
From £13
Cosmic Cowboy Creation
From £13
Floral Spirit
From £13
Abstract Horizon Blend
From £13
Eat, Drink, and Be Merry
From £13
The Last Supper — Leonardo da Vinci
From £13
Cloud Cat Wanderer
From £13
Whispers of Ranunculus
From £13
Self-Portrait Facing Death — Pablo Picasso
From £13
Woman in Polka Dots
From £13
Abstract Geometric Flow
From £13
Modern Son of Man
From £13
Madonna of the Pomegranate — Sandro Botticelli
From £13
Judith and the Head of Holofernes — Gustav Klimt
From £13
Charing Cross Bridge — Claude Monet
From £13
The Red Studio — Henri Matisse
From £13
Smoke and Mystery
From £13
Atomic Bird Abstract
From £13
The Nightmare — Henry Fuseli
From £13
Abstract Day of the Dead
From £13
Gin Cocktail Celebration
From £13
Madonna and Child with a Pomegranate — Leonardo da Vinci
From £13
The Geographer — Johannes Vermeer
From £13
The Lady of Shalott — John William Waterhouse
From £13
Annunciation — Leonardo da Vinci
From £13
Kindred Spirits — Asher Brown Durand
From £13
The Bronze David — Donatello
From £13
The Charioteer of Delphi — Unknown
From £13
Jimson Weed, White Flower No. 1 — Georgia O'Keeffe
From £13
Photographer's Toolkit
From £13
Almond Blossom — Vincent van Gogh
From £13
Woman in Blue Reading a Letter — Johannes Vermeer
From £13
Abstract Geometric Layers
From £13The Okawall guide
How to choose hallway wall art
50 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 hallway 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 hallway 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 hallway 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 hallways want quiet art; quiet hallways want one confident piece. The goal is a finished room, not a busy one.