Not all wall art is created equal — and not all art works in every room. The perfect piece for your living room might feel completely wrong in a bathroom or home office. Here's a room-by-room guide to choosing art that truly belongs.
Living Room: Make a Statement
The living room is where art gets to shine. This is the space for your most significant, expressive pieces. A large abstract art canvas above the sofa creates a dynamic focal point and sets the room's entire tonal mood. Alternatively, a curated gallery wall mixing boho art, landscape prints, and photography adds personality and tells your story.
For living rooms, aim for artwork that is at least 90–120 cm wide as a standalone piece. Scale matters hugely — art that is too small floats awkwardly and lacks impact.
Bedroom: Calm and Personal
The bedroom is your sanctuary, so art here should support rest and relaxation. Soft, tonal landscape art — a misty forest, a gentle shoreline, rolling hills at dusk — creates a calming visual backdrop. Warm boho art with earthy tones and organic shapes adds a cosy, intimate quality to the space.
Position art above the headboard — centred and at a comfortable viewing height from the bed. Avoid highly stimulating or jarring abstract pieces that might disrupt your sense of calm before sleep.
Kitchen and Dining Room: Vibrant and Inviting
The kitchen and dining area is where energy and appetite meet. This is a great space for vibrant, playful art. Bold abstract art in warm reds, ochres, and terracotta tones stimulates appetite and conversation. Food-inspired prints, botanical illustrations, and colourful boho art motifs work beautifully in these spaces.
Keep kitchen art relatively small and well-protected — steam and cooking residue can damage delicate papers. Framed prints or canvas art are both practical choices.
Home Office: Focus and Inspiration
Your workspace deserves art that motivates without distracting. Architectural landscape art — clean lines, open vistas, structured compositions — supports focus and a sense of possibility. Minimal abstract art in cool blues, greens, and greys can enhance concentration. Avoid overly decorative or visually chaotic pieces that compete for your attention.
Bathroom: Small and Considered
Yes, bathrooms deserve art too. Small, well-framed botanical prints, simple line art, and gentle landscape art prints add a spa-like quality to a bathroom. Choose moisture-resistant frames or canvas-wrapped prints that can withstand humidity. Keep it simple — one or two small pieces are plenty.
Hallways and Entryways: Set the Tone
Your entryway is the first impression your home makes. A single strong piece of wall art — a striking abstract, a colourful boho art print, or a dramatic landscape — signals your aesthetic to guests immediately. In narrow hallways, vertical formats and consistent gallery arrangements work best.
Quick Checklist for Every Room
• Match the art's mood to the room's function (calm for bedrooms, energetic for dining rooms).
• Scale art to the wall and furniture — neither too small nor overwhelming.
• Consider humidity and light levels (avoid direct sun on delicate prints).
• Choose cohesive frame styles for rooms with multiple pieces.




