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- Morgen ved Kap Inubō Plakat
- Ecchu Umidani bjergpas Plakat
- Daggry over Yamanaka-sø Plakat
- Udsigt over Eiffeltårnet Plakat
- Lissabons bro Plakat
- Alfama Plakat
- Lissabon gamle by 1 Plakat
- Lissabons gamle by 2 Plakat
- Mitre Peak Plakat
- Le mont Paitju Plakat
- Le Siniolchu Plakat
- Kalkstensnål Plakat
- Trappe Plakat
- Toppen af K2 Plakat
- Broad Peak Plakat
- Yoshino Plakat
- Ryoson Plakat
- Grønt landskab Plakat
- Fuji Plakat
- The New Yorker Plakat
- Iwakuni by Plakat
- Brazil 2 Plakat
- Rejse til Marokko Plakat
- Rejse til Italien Plakat
- Rejse til Santorini Plakat
- Rejse til London Plakat
- Venedig rejseplakat Plakat
- Rejse til Paris Plakat
- Faust, tragedie af Goethe Plakat
- Lac Des Quatre-Cantons Plakat
- Tidligt efterår i Urayasu Plakat
- Morgen ved Kap Inubō Plakat
- Ecchu Umidani bjergpas Plakat
- Daggry over Yamanaka-sø Plakat
- Udsigt over Eiffeltårnet Plakat
- Lissabons bro Plakat
- Alfama Plakat
- Lissabon gamle by 1 Plakat
- Lissabons gamle by 2 Plakat
- Mitre Peak Plakat
- Le mont Paitju Plakat
- Le Siniolchu Plakat
- Kalkstensnål Plakat
- Trappe Plakat
- Toppen af K2 Plakat
- Broad Peak Plakat
- Yoshino Plakat
- Ryoson Plakat
- Grønt landskab Plakat
- Fuji Plakat
- The New Yorker Plakat
- Iwakuni by Plakat







































Where the horizon becomes a story
Landscape is a quiet laboratory of mood: light, weather, distance, and the human urge to travel without moving. This collection gathers vintage poster and print imagery from late nineteenth-century painting to mid-century travel graphics, from alpine photography to Japanese woodblock visions. Some scenes feel documentary, others distilled into pattern and color, but all treat place as a kind of narrative.
Techniques, from carved blocks to silver gelatin
Japanese shin-hanga artists approached landscape like theatre, staging atmosphere through clean silhouettes and controlled gradation. In Fine Wind, Clear Morning (1829) by Katsushika Hokusai, Mount Fuji becomes a single red plane against a clear sky, a lesson in structural composition that still resonates with Minimalist wall art. A century later, Morning at Cape Inubō (1931) by Kawase Hasui shifts the drama to surf and shadow, using layered blues that feel almost cinematic. At the other extreme, Vittorio Sella’s expedition photographs such as Le pic K2 (1909) by Vittorio Sella turn texture and scale into subject matter, aligning naturally with the tonal restraint of Black & White prints.
Rooms, light, and the kind of calm you want
Landscape wall art is unusually responsive to lighting. North-facing rooms benefit from coastal scenes and pale skies that hold brightness longer; pairing a Hasui seascape with related prints from Sea & Ocean keeps the horizon line consistent without repeating the same palette. In corridors and stairwells, mountain imagery reads as upward momentum, while in bedrooms a gentler distance view can reduce visual noise. If your interior leans toward stone, linen, and oak, the humid greens and sunlit whites of Flower Garden and Bungalow, Bermuda (1899) by Winslow Homer sit comfortably alongside natural materials.
Curating by geography, then by rhythm
A strong gallery wall starts with rhythm rather than theme. Mix one broad horizon with one intimate foreground scene, then add a graphic counterpoint. Maps are especially useful because they introduce line-work and typography; a route diagram or coastal chart from Maps can sharpen the composition next to painterly color fields. For interiors that already feature vintage objects, travel-era graphics from Advertising can supply a period voice without overwhelming the quieter landscapes. When you want seasonal cadence and flatter color, the wider world of Oriental prints offers kindred motifs that pair well with landscape posters.
Why landscapes keep returning
Unlike portraiture, landscapes suggest a narrative and leave space for the viewer to finish it, which is why a vintage art print can sit across styles from Scandinavian restraint to antique cabinets. A useful approach is to choose one anchor image, then echo its dominant note elsewhere: Fuji’s iron red, Cross’s pastel haze, or Sella’s graphite greys in a textile, vase, or rug. The Pink Cloud (1896) by Henri-Edmond Cross is particularly effective when you need color that stays airy rather than heavy. For broader context on how different painters and printmakers handle distance, the view across Famous Artists helps clarify what you respond to: haze, hard edges, or pure pattern.





































