The complete Kuriosis collection — thousands of art prints spanning Japanese woodblock masters, Old Master paintings, scientific illustration, and contemporary abstract work. From Hokusai to Haeckel to artists working with us directly. Browse by artist, style, or subject — or start here and see what stops you.
This is everything Kuriosis makes — the full catalog across every style, period, and artist we carry. The range covers three centuries of art: Edo-period Japanese woodblock masters like Hokusai and Hasui Kawase, European Old Masters and scientific illustrators like Ernst Haeckel and Maria Sibylla Merian, Art Nouveau poster design by Alphonse Mucha, and contemporary artists we collaborate with directly from our Berlin studio.
If you already know what you're looking for, the subcollections will get you there faster. Browse Japanese prints for woodblock and shin-hanga work, abstract art for geometric and minimalist compositions, botanical prints for scientific illustration, or vintage posters for Art Nouveau, Art Deco, and Belle Époque design. Each piece is printed to order on the day it ships — not pulled from warehouse stock.
Choosing Between Paper and Canvas
The format changes how a print reads on the wall. Fine art paper — smooth, matte, uncoated — preserves crisp line work, precise colour transitions, and fine detail. It suits illustration, photography, typography, and graphic design. Paper prints are available in A3, 50×70cm, 70×100cm, and A0, with oak, black, or walnut brown frames.
Canvas adds warmth and texture that suits painterly work. Impressionist paintings, abstract compositions, and atmospheric landscapes gain depth from the canvas surface that flat paper cannot replicate. Canvas prints come in 30×40cm, 50×70cm, and 70×100cm, with an optional floating frame that creates a 5mm shadow gap for a gallery finish.
If the original was painted, canvas is usually the right call. If it was drawn, printed, or photographed, paper preserves the precision better.
Sizing and Getting Started
Size matters more than subject when it comes to how a print reads in a room. A3 is smaller than most people expect once it's on a wall — for a standard living room, 50×70cm or 70×100cm is the right starting point. For a large wall or statement piece, A0 on paper or 70×100cm on canvas creates real presence.
For framing, oak is the most versatile option — it works with warm and cool palettes without competing with the art. Black frames sharpen contrast and suit graphic, geometric, and photographic work. Walnut brown adds warmth for vintage and natural history subjects.
If this is your first purchase, our bestsellers show what other customers choose — the prints that consistently work across different interiors. For a curated entry by style, explore our modern prints for contemporary work or flower market posters for bold botanical colour.
Every print is produced in our Berlin studio using archival pigment inks rated for 100+ years.
The most common mistake when buying art prints is going too small. This guide covers every size we offer, room-by-room recommendations, the 60–75% wall coverage rule, and why you should...