Free Shipping Across the USA Easy 30-Day Returns Secure Payment Friendly Customer Support Free Shipping Across the USA Easy 30-Day Returns Secure Payment Friendly Customer Support Free Shipping Across the USA Easy 30-Day Returns Secure Payment Friendly Customer Support Free Shipping Across the USA Easy 30-Day Returns Secure Payment Friendly Customer Support Free Shipping Across the USA Easy 30-Day Returns Secure Payment Friendly Customer Support Free Shipping Across the USA Easy 30-Day Returns Secure Payment Friendly Customer Support

Futurism Wall Art

Posters with futuristic motifs are breathtaking: neon cities, space landscapes. It seems that wall art is gaining new life, inviting us into the future.

39 products
Filters
Color
Orientation
Reset

About Futurism

Futurism art moves. Sharp diagonals, blurred motion, machines and bodies caught mid-rush - the painters who started this in early-1900s Italy were obsessed with speed, engines, and the energy of a new century, and that restless feeling is what these prints carry. Expect fractured forms, repeated outlines that suggest a figure stepping or a wheel spinning, and color used like force rather than decoration. I like this work in a home office or a studio where you want the wall to feel awake, not calm.

Where this Futurism wall art lands

It suits people who already lean toward modern and machine-age design - someone who likes clean lines but wants a bit of chaos in them. Hung over a desk or a record player it pushes the room forward. The motion in these pieces also plays well next to organic subjects for contrast, so a Futurist canvas beside something from Nature & Landscapes sets human speed against open quiet. If you want a softer counterweight, a print from Animals reads as still where this one races.

Each design comes three ways: canvas stretched on a real wood frame, a flat unframed poster, or a poster set behind glass. 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 so corners arrive sharp. My honest take - go large with these if the wall allows, since the motion needs room to breathe.