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Unifying Artwork: Theme Gallery Walls

While some of you might think that theme rooms are never okay, what about a more subtle approach? How about a themed gallery wall. We are definitely fans of this look, which seems to work best as a way to unify flea market finds. So instead of a random paint-by-number collection, maybe you just stick to landscapes. We love this look. Do you have any themed artwork collections?

 
 

1 vintage sports team photographs, Design Sponge
2 vintage portraits of ladies, Living Etc.
3 artwork featuring public figures from the 18th century, Country Living
4 seascapes, Cote Maison
5 bird themed wall, House Tour: Sam's Carriage House Meets Gypsy Caravan
6 nautical themed wall, WhiteApple: A Vintage Victorian Fantasy

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artwork, collection, display

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Comments (12)

That first wall is really gorgeous!

posted by jessimarie33 on May 5th 2009 at 11:13am
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I think it's more like displaying a collection than decorating around a theme.

posted by Julie on May 5th 2009 at 11:30am
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Yep, and not on purpose. I realized two years ago when I moved that 80% of my artwork centered around photos of doorways and the other 20% centered around ocean sunsets. So, I'm doing two different themed walls.

posted by krpm1 aka Kelly:) on May 5th 2009 at 12:02pm
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It's not at all like theme decorating. It's curating.

I like to put artwork with other pieces that relate to it.

posted by Lisa (Montreal) on May 5th 2009 at 12:25pm
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I have a 'collection' of landscapes I've photographed during my travels. They're not of any one type, although maybe you could categorize them as 'hiking/skiing/climbing photos'

posted by kimmyt on May 5th 2009 at 12:51pm
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My living room is all of my black and white photography and one installation type piece that is also white, and the dining room is all of the really pop/colorful stuff, with a collection of pieces over the fireplace that are all of a face or a group of faces. I think it works but I sometimes get bored with the lack of color in the living room art.

posted by tabithacat on May 5th 2009 at 12:59pm
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I have a collection of post cards from traveling in the US and around the world. I stuck with simple glass and clip frames and display them with artwork and sculpture I picked up on my trips.

posted by sofistiphunk on May 5th 2009 at 1:21pm
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one must becareful since it can quickly go wrong!

posted by Haunted_Studio on May 5th 2009 at 1:34pm
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at my last place, i did this - all the art/posters on one wall were water-related; a Monet Venice print, a sailboat print, a print of Dufy's Baie des Anges and an old skyline of Toronto at sunset photo taken from the island.

in my new place, i will be putting all my cityscapes on one wall - the Toronto photo, one of NYC pre-2001, and Ottawa, where i lived before i came here. i'm not worried about adding anything else that strikes my fancy since i'm installing a picture rail system.

posted by rouquinne on May 5th 2009 at 1:54pm
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i wish all the picture groupings shown on this site were as pleasing and coherent as the ones in the examples above - unified by, theme, shape, colour, etc. and very tightly grouped to make one shape as a whole. just tacking random pictures up on a wall does not a grouping make.

posted by amed studio on May 5th 2009 at 2:58pm
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I like this as well - I agree that grouping images that have some connective theme make them that much more cohesive and interesting.

posted by bepsf on May 5th 2009 at 4:47pm
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I'm with jessiemarie33.

posted by Seaside on May 6th 2009 at 10:34am
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