Pop Wall Art
Products in this collection
Pop Art Tennis Woman Yellow Burst Background
Pixel Mona Lisa Holding Bitcoin Psychedelic
Mona Lisa Graffiti Street Art Neon Background
David Bust Graffiti Love Neon Pop Art
Neon Music Party Night Pop Art
Retro Pop Art Woman Sunglasses Rainbow
Greek Statue Pop Art Colorful Floral Background
Retro Pop Art Young Man With Glasses
Greek Statue Sunglasses Bubble Gum Purple Background
White Sculpture Girl Red Sunglasses Orange Background
Pop Art Woman Rainbow Glasses Retro Car
Retro TV Head Man Pop Art Surreal
My Doctor Says I Need Glasses Pop Art
Batman Old Man Blowing Bubble Gum Yellow
Girl With Pearl Earring Eating Burger
Mona Lisa Urban Streetwear Gold Jewelry Illustration
Albert Einstein Pop Art Colorful Portrait
Mona Lisa Smoking Joint Classic Art
Pop Art Political Figure Blowing Bubblegum Pink
About Pop
This is our pop art corner, where flat blocks of color, bold outlines, and a wink of comic-book attitude take over the wall. The look comes straight out of the 1960s, when artists pulled imagery from ads, soup cans, and Sunday funnies and blew it up loud. Expect halftone dots, primary reds and yellows, and faces or objects repeated like a printing press got a little carried away. It is cheeky, a bit retro, and unapologetically fun.
I lean toward this Pop wall art for rooms that already have some energy: a kitchen with bright tile, a teenager's bedroom, a home bar, or a creative studio where a beige print would just sit there and apologize. It plays well with mid-century furniture and clean white walls that let the color do the shouting.
How it shows up on your wall
Each piece comes three ways. The canvas is stretched on a real wood frame, so the color reads dense and the edges stay crisp. There is a flat poster if you want to slot it into a frame you already own, and a poster behind glass for a sharper, gallery feel. Sizes run from 16x12 up to 40x30 inches, and a 20x16 canvas is $69. We print with eco-friendly ink and pack everything flat in a fitted box rather than rolling it in a tube, since pop art lives or dies on clean lines.
If the bright graphic mood pulls you in, the playful shapes in Animals sit nicely beside it, and for a calmer contrast the open scenery in Nature & Landscapes gives the eye somewhere to rest.