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Art that makes stories visible

Art that does more than decorate — figurative compositions, bold abstractions, and illustrative work where something is happening beneath the surface. From Jukyong Park's urban scenes to Maarten Leon's layered imagery, each print invites interpretation rather than passive viewing.

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What Makes This Collection Different

Most wall art is chosen to match a room. The prints in this collection are chosen to add something to it — a question, a mood, a narrative thread. The work here ranges from figurative compositions with implied stories to bold abstractions that suggest movement and tension. Artists like ThingDesign bring graphic intensity with pieces like Bold Contemplation, while Maarten Léon layers imagery into compositions that reveal more over time. Jukyong Park contributes urban scenes where anonymous figures carry unexplained weight. These are prints that hold attention, not just fill space. What connects them is purpose: each piece was selected because it communicates something specific, not because it fits a colour scheme. The collection crosses styles deliberately — the variety reflects the many forms storytelling takes in visual art.

Choosing the Right Format

Narrative and figurative work benefits from size — larger formats give the viewer space to read the composition and find its details. Fine art paper prints are available in A3, 50×70cm, 70×100cm, and A0, with frame options in oak, black, and walnut brown. Black frames suit graphic or high-contrast pieces where the drama needs emphasis, while oak works better for warmer, more intimate scenes where the atmosphere matters more than the line work. Canvas prints come in 30×40cm, 50×70cm, and 70×100cm, and the textured surface adds physical depth that suits painterly compositions — particularly those with layered colour and gestural brushwork. A floating frame gives canvas prints a gallery-level finish. Browse more from contemporary artists we work with directly.

Pairing Narrative Prints

Narrative art works best when each piece has room to breathe. Avoid hanging too many story-driven works side by side — the visual weight can compete rather than complement. Instead, pair one strong narrative piece with a quieter companion. A figurative work by Jukyong Park next to a simpler abstract creates balance without visual overload. For a hallway or entrance, a single large-format piece from this collection makes a stronger statement than a group. In living rooms, combine with work from Little Dean for complementary energy, or with abstract prints for contrast between the narrative and the non-representational. The key is giving each story-driven piece enough wall space that the viewer can engage with it individually rather than scanning past it.

All prints are produced in our Berlin studio using archival pigment inks rated for 100+ years.