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Curated Collection

The world's
greatest paintings,
for your walls

Museum-quality hand-painted reproductions and archival canvas prints of history's most celebrated works. Every piece researched, crafted, and delivered with curatorial care.

400K+
works catalogued
30,640
artists
100%
hand-painted
Masters of the Canvas

The Great Artists

The painters who shaped the way humanity sees beauty, light, and form. Hover to explore their defining works.

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Leonardo Da Vinci
Leonardo Da Vinci

Explore Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519): Renaissance genius behind Mona Lisa & The Last Supper! Discover his sfumato technique, anatomical studies & groundbreaking inventions.

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Rembrandt Van Rijn
Rembrandt Van Rijn

Explore Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669), Dutch Baroque master of light & shadow! Discover iconic self-portraits, biblical scenes & groundbreaking etchings. Experience the Dutch Golden Age.

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Vincent Willem Van Gogh
Vincent Willem Van Gogh

Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890): Explore the life & art of the Dutch Post-Impressionist master behind 'Starry Night' and 'Sunflowers'. Discover his bold style & lasting impact on modern art.

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Pablo Picasso
Pablo Picasso

Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) was a revolutionary Spanish painter and sculptor, co-founder of Cubism, and master of diverse styles. Known for iconic works like Guernica & Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, his legacy continues to inspire.

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Salvador Dalí
Salvador Dalí

Explore Salvador Dalí (1904-1989), the master of Surrealism! Discover dreamlike landscapes, iconic imagery like melting clocks & his lasting impact on art & pop culture. #SalvadorDali #Surrealism

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Michelangelo Buonarroti
Michelangelo Buonarroti

Michelangelo (1475-1564): Explore the Renaissance master's iconic sculptures like David & Pietà, breathtaking Sistine Chapel frescoes, and lasting impact on art history!

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Claude Monet
Claude Monet

Explore the world of Claude Monet, the Impressionist master renowned for capturing fleeting light and color through iconic landscapes like Water Lilies & Haystacks.

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Henri Matisse
Henri Matisse

Explore Henri Matisse (1869-1954): Fauvism's master of color! Discover iconic paintings, cut-paper collages & his influence on modern art. A leading French painter.

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Edvard Munch
Edvard Munch

Explore Edvard Munch (1863-1944), pioneer of Expressionism! Discover 'The Scream' & art exploring anxiety, mortality, love & psychological themes.

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Gustav Klimt
Gustav Klimt

Discover Gustav Klimt (1862-1918), the Austrian Symbolist master of Art Nouveau! Explore his iconic 'Golden Phase,' sensual portraits, and masterpieces like *The Kiss*. Learn about his life, influences & legacy.

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Raphael
Raphael

Raphael (1483-1520): A High Renaissance master renowned for his serene Madonnas, architectural genius, and iconic works like 'The School of Athens'. Explore his Urbino beginnings & artistic legacy.

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Pierre-auguste Renoir
Pierre-auguste Renoir

Explore Pierre-Auguste Renoir's (1841-1919) luminous Impressionist paintings! Discover portraits, Parisian life & feminine beauty in his iconic artworks.

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Dutch Interior I — Joan Miró, Oil On Canvas, Surrealism
Most Famous Paintings
Own a
masterpiece.

Not a print. A hand-painted oil reproduction of the world's greatest works — framed in solid wood and delivered ready to hang.

Why Most Famous Paintings

Crafted like a conservator.
Priced for collectors.

Each reproduction is studied from high-resolution museum archives, painted on linen or cotton canvas, and inspected to museum conservation standards before it ever leaves our atelier.

18
layers of paint
3–4
weeks per piece
100%
hand-finished
50yr
colour guarantee
See How We Paint
The Collection

Most popular Artworks — by period

Navigate eight centuries of artistic achievement — from Byzantine gold to contemporary pluralism — and find the works that speak to you.

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01

Early Medieval

c. 500–1000 CE

Characterized by the fusion of classical Greco-Roman, Christian, and barbarian artistic traditions across Europe. This era saw the height of Byzantine imperial splendor, the development of intricate insular illumination, and the rise of Carolingian and Ottonian monastic workshops. Art primarily served liturgical functions, emphasizing spiritual abstraction over naturalistic representation.

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02

High Medieval

c. 1000–1300 CE

Marked by a dramatic expansion of urban centers and religious institutions across Western Europe. This period witnessed the development of monumental Romanesque stone sculpture and the subsequent birth of the Gothic style, defined by soaring rib vaults and luminous stained glass. Imagery became more expressive, reflecting a deeply structured feudal and ecclesiastical worldview.

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03

Late Medieval

c. 1300–1400 CE

A transformative era defined by profound social shifts and the devastating impact of the Black Death. Artistic production responded with intensely emotive, humanized religious imagery. The International Gothic style brought refined courtly elegance to panel painting, while Italian Proto-Renaissance pioneers began reintroducing spatial depth, laying the groundwork for humanistic naturalism.

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04

Renaissance

c. 1400–1600 CE

Characterized by a self-conscious revival of classical antiquity and the rise of intellectual humanism. Artists revolutionized visual culture through the mathematical mastery of linear perspective, anatomical precision, and the development of oil painting techniques. No longer mere artisans, creators achieved elevated status, balancing secular civic pride with innovative sacred commissions.

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05

Early Modern

c. 1600–1800 CE

Spanning the dynamic shifts of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, this era encompasses the theatrical grandeur of the Baroque and the delicate intimacy of the Rococo. Driven by Counter-Reformation zeal and the wealth of global trade networks, artists manipulated light, shadow, and scale to create emotionally charged, politically potent visual environments.

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06

19th Century

c. 1800–1900 CE

An era of rapid industrialization and socio-political upheaval that shattered traditional academic hegemony. Artistic production fragmented into a succession of revolutionary movements: the emotional intensity of Romanticism, the unvarnished truth of Realism, and the ephemeral light studies of Impressionism. This period fundamentally redefined the relationship between the artist and modern society.

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07

Modern

c. 1900–1970 CE

Defined by a radical rejection of traditional representation and the celebration of the avant-garde. Spurred by global conflicts and technological acceleration, artists embraced abstraction and conceptual experimentation. Movements such as Cubism, Expressionism, and Pop Art interrogated the very definition of art, reflecting the fragmented psychological landscape of twentieth-century life.

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08

Contemporary

c. 1970–Present

Encompassing diverse artistic practices from the late twentieth century to the present day. Characterized by pluralism and postmodern critique, this era moves beyond singular movements to embrace installation, performance, and digital media. Artists engage directly with global networks, questioning identities, geopolitical structures, and the boundaries of an increasingly interconnected visual culture.

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67,000 masterpieces

One wall. One masterpiece away.

Every great painting, hand-reproduced in oil and delivered ready to hang. Find yours.

Curatorial Guide

Movements that changed the way we see — browse by movement

Browse our collection by the movements that reshaped how painters saw — and how the world saw paintings.

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01

Realism

Rejecting idealized academic conventions and dramatic romanticism, Realism emerged in the mid-19th century as a deliberate effort to document everyday life with unvarnished objectivity. Painters focused on the working class, mundane tasks, and contemporary social realities, favoring earthy palettes and honest representation over mythologized or heroic subjects.

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02

American Realism

Developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, this movement captured the changing landscape of American life with profound honesty. Artists documented rapidly growing urban centers, industrial labor, and quiet rural communities, creating a distinct visual identity that reflected the social transformations, grit, and unique character of a developing nation.

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03

Romanticism

Arising in the late 18th century as a critique of Enlightenment rationalism, Romanticism championed intense emotion, individual imagination, and the awesome power of nature. Artworks from this period frequently feature dramatic compositions, rich colorism, and a fascination with the sublime, emphasizing human vulnerability against vast, untamable elements.

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04

Impressionism

Originating in late 19th-century France, Impressionism revolutionized Western painting by discarding formal studio practices for plein-air execution. Characterized by loose, visible brushwork and a vivid palette, artists prioritized the shifting effects of light, atmospheric conditions, and transient everyday moments over precise line and traditional narrative content.

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05

Post-Impressionism

Emerging as an extension of and reaction to Impressionism, this diverse late 19th-century movement shifted focus from objective sensory perceptions to structured, symbolic expression. Artists employed vivid, non-naturalistic color, thick paint application, and defined geometric forms to explore personal psychological depths and greater formal order on the canvas.

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06

Symbolism

This late 19th-century avant-garde movement rejected literal representation in favor of expressing ideas, psychological states, and spiritual truths through metaphorical imagery. Heavily influenced by poetry and mysticism, artists constructed dreamlike, allegorical scenes that prioritized internal emotions, mythology, and the subconscious over the objective observation of the natural world.

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07

Neoclassicism

Inspired by the archaeological rediscovery of classical antiquity, Neoclassicism dominated the late 18th century by emphasizing rationality, order, and civic virtue. Reacting against late Baroque decorative excesses, paintings feature austere, symmetric compositions, linear precision, smooth surfaces, and historical subject matter designed to inspire moral clarity and political duty.

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08

Art Nouveau

Flourishing at the turn of the 20th century, Art Nouveau sought to break down the traditional hierarchy between fine art and applied arts. Visually defined by sinuous, flowing lines, organic curves, and elegant botanical motifs, the movement aimed to create a harmoniously integrated aesthetic environment encompassing painting, architecture, and decorative objects.

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09

Fauvism

Pioneered in the early 20th century, Fauvism was characterized by its revolutionary use of explosive, non-naturalistic color and raw, visible brushwork. Artists liberated color from its traditional descriptive role, employing pure, unmodulated pigments directly from the tube to project intense emotion and establish structural rhythm independent of literal reality.

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10

Baroque

Encouraged by the Counter-Reformation in the 17th century, Baroque art is defined by dynamic movement, theatrical grandeur, and intense emotional appeal. Masters used pronounced chiaroscuro — a sharp contrast between deep shadow and piercing light — to craft deeply immersive, awe-inspiring compositions that engaged the viewer's spirituality through vivid sensory experiences.

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11

Renaissance

Marking the transition from the medieval period to modernity, the Renaissance witnessed a profound revival of classical Greco-Roman learning and philosophy. Artistically, this era introduced revolutionary advancements in linear perspective, anatomical precision, and balanced, harmonious proportions, synthesizing deep Christian devotion with a newly awakened scientific humanism and naturalism.

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12

Expressionism

Originating in early 20th-century northern Europe, Expressionism prioritized the depiction of subjective psychological states over objective external reality. Artists utilized radical formal distortion, harsh jagged lines, and jarring, unnatural colors to project internal anxieties, alienation, and raw emotional intensity, frequently offering a pointed critique of modern industrial society.

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13

Surrealism

Founded in the 1920s, Surrealism aimed to bridge the fractured boundaries between dream and reality by liberating the creative power of the subconscious mind. Influenced deeply by psychoanalysis, artists utilized unexpected, bizarre juxtapositions, automatism, and illusionistic techniques to challenge rational thought and explore the poetic logic of the unconscious.

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14

Cubism

Co-founded in the early 20th century, Cubism radically dismantled centuries of traditional perspective by deconstructing objects into flat, geometric facets. Instead of depicting a subject from a single static viewpoint, artists rendered figures from multiple angles simultaneously, asserting the canvas as a conceptual, two-dimensional construction rather than an illusionistic window.

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15

Pop Art

Emerging in the mid-20th century, Pop Art challenged the elitism of traditional fine art by incorporating imagery from popular culture, mass media, and consumerism. Utilizing commercial printing techniques, comic strip aesthetics, and bold advertising palettes, artists mirrored and critiqued post-war society, effectively blurring the boundaries between high and low culture.

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16

Abstract Expressionism

Developing in post-World War II New York, Abstract Expressionism shifted the focus of painting to pure abstraction and monumental scale. Through spontaneous gestural brushwork, action painting, and expansive color fields, artists sought to communicate universal human emotions and cross-cultural spiritual truths directly from the subconscious, emphasizing the physical act of creation.

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17

Modernism

Spanning the late 19th to mid-20th centuries, Modernism represents a broad, experimental break from classical academic traditions in response to rapid industrialization and global change. Embracing the ethos of constant reinvention, artists systematically questioned the nature of representation, exploring fragmentation, abstraction, and the intrinsic qualities of their artistic mediums.

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18

Contemporary

Produced from the late 20th century to the present, Contemporary art is characterized by a globally diverse, institutionally critical, and technologically fluid landscape. Moving beyond traditional boundaries of style and medium, artists utilize conceptual frameworks, digital tools, and multimedia installations to engage dynamically with urgent themes of identity, globalization, and socio-political critique.

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Browse by movement

Find the style that speaks to you.

Test Your Eye

Three Quizzes, One Question Each

Pick an answer below — then follow the link to continue the five-question challenge on its dedicated page.

Museum Quiz
Q 1 of 5

What is the primary focus of the Columbia University Museum of Art (CUMA)? — New York City, United States of America

  • Primarily displaying European Renaissance paintings.
  • Showcasing a diverse collection of art from around the globe, emphasizing cultural representation beyond Western traditions.
  • Focusing exclusively on American art from the 19th century.
Artwork Quiz
Q 1 of 5

What is the primary subject matter depicted in "Monkey"?

  • A Landscape Scene
  • A Portrait of a Human Figure
  • A Monkey Hanging from a Tree Branch
Artist Quiz
Q 1 of 5

Luca Signorelli is best known for his contribution to what artistic movement?

  • Romanticism
  • Impressionism
  • Renaissance
The Atelier Promise

Painted with intention.
Delivered with care.

01

Museum-accurate research

Every reproduction begins in our archive. We study the original work through museum-grade photography and scholarly catalogues to ensure each colour, texture, and proportional nuance is exact.

02

Hand-painted by specialists

Our studio employs painters trained in classical technique — many with fine arts degrees and specialisations in specific periods or schools. Each artist is matched to the works that suit their mastery.

03

Archival materials only

Linen and cotton canvases. Oil colours rated at 100+ years lightfastness. Varnishes identical in formula to those used in museum conservation. Because a great reproduction deserves the same care as the original.