Green Abstract Prints
Explore our collection of green abstract prints, featuring expressive compositions in sage, olive, emerald, forest green, mint, teal and softer blue-green tones. From geometric abstraction and lyrical colour studies to organic shapes and bold modern compositions, green abstract art can introduce calm, depth and natural colour without relying on a literal landscape or botanical subject.
GalleryThane's green abstract wall art includes works by important pioneers of modern abstraction, with prints available in a wide range of sizes as fine art paper prints, framed prints and canvas panels. Whether you are looking for a soft sage green abstract print for a bedroom, a rich emerald statement piece for a living room or a sophisticated olive composition for a hallway or office, this collection brings together green abstract art for contemporary and traditional interiors.
Explore Green Abstract Prints
Browse abstract art by colour, discover related styles of green wall art and explore major modern artists who transformed colour, geometry and organic form into new visual languages.
Green Abstract Wall Art: Colour, Form and Natural Harmony
Green has a distinctive place within abstract art. It is strongly associated with the natural world, yet an abstract artist does not need to paint a recognisable tree, field or leaf to evoke feelings of growth, calm, renewal and organic life. Colour itself can carry these associations.
In abstract compositions, green can appear as a dominant field of colour, a geometric accent, a soft atmospheric wash or one element within a complex arrangement of shapes and lines. Different shades create very different effects. Pale sage and mint can feel quiet and restrained, olive brings warmth and earthiness, while emerald and forest green create greater depth and visual intensity.
Green also changes dramatically according to the colours placed beside it. Against pink or red it can create energetic contrast. Beside blue it often feels calm and harmonious. Combined with beige, cream and brown, it creates a softer natural palette, while black and white can give green a stronger graphic presence.
Wassily Kandinsky and Expressive Green Abstraction
Wassily Kandinsky was one of the great pioneers of abstract art and explored the expressive potential of colour, line and geometric form. He believed that colours could create emotional and spiritual responses, rather like musical sounds.
In Kandinsky's compositions, green may appear beside red, blue, yellow, black and violet in energetic arrangements of circles, lines and irregular forms. Rather than describing a particular object, colour becomes an independent visual force.
Some Kandinsky works are bold and highly complex, while others are more restrained and geometric. This variety makes his art particularly versatile for interiors. A colourful composition with green accents can connect several tones already present in a room, while a more limited palette can create a cleaner modern focal point.
Green Kandinsky prints work particularly well in living rooms, dining rooms, offices and creative spaces where strong colour and visual movement are desired.
Paul Klee: Green, Geometry and Imagined Landscapes
Paul Klee developed a unique artistic language combining abstraction, symbols, geometry, drawing and extraordinary sensitivity to colour. His works can suggest landscapes, gardens, architecture, music and imagined worlds without describing them literally.
Green appears in Klee's art in many forms, from muted olive and soft blue-green to brighter passages of emerald and turquoise. Some paintings are arranged as grids of coloured squares, while others contain organic shapes, delicate lines and mysterious symbols.
Klee's work is particularly suitable for interiors where you want abstract art with colour but not necessarily overwhelming scale or intensity. His compositions can be playful, poetic and contemplative, making them good choices for bedrooms, studies, reading spaces and smaller living rooms.
Green Klee prints also work naturally with warm neutral interiors because many of his paintings combine green with ochre, terracotta, brown, cream, blue and muted red.
Hilma af Klint: Green Geometry and Organic Symbolism
Hilma af Klint created visionary abstract paintings filled with circles, spirals, botanical forms, geometric structures and symbolic colour. Her work has become recognised as one of the most remarkable early achievements in abstraction.
Green appears throughout her paintings alongside pink, yellow, blue, orange and violet. Some compositions are soft and pastel-toned, while others use stronger contrasts and monumental forms.
Her art frequently moves between geometry and forms suggestive of growth, plants, cells or natural cycles. This makes green especially appropriate within her visual language, connecting the colour's natural associations with her interest in spiritual and symbolic development.
Hilma af Klint prints are especially effective in bedrooms, living rooms and contemplative spaces where balanced composition and distinctive colour are desired. Larger works can create a dramatic statement, while softer pastel compositions can suit calmer interiors.
František Kupka: Colour, Rhythm and Movement
František Kupka was another important pioneer of abstract art. His paintings explore colour, movement, rhythm and geometry through circles, vertical bands, flowing shapes and carefully constructed compositions.
Green can appear alongside blue, red, yellow and violet in works where the interaction of colour itself becomes the principal subject. Rather than representing a landscape or figure directly, Kupka used colour and shape to generate visual energy.
Some of his works feel architectural and geometric, while others appear fluid and organic. This range makes Kupka prints particularly effective in modern living rooms, offices and dining spaces where strong visual form is desired.
Green works especially well in Kupka's more colourful compositions because it can act both as a calming element and as a vivid contrast against warmer red, orange and yellow tones.
Robert Delaunay: Green within Rhythmic Colour
Robert Delaunay made colour central to his artistic practice, using circles, arcs, repeated forms and strong contrasts to create a sense of rhythm and visual movement.
In Delaunay's work, green frequently interacts with red, blue, orange and yellow. These complementary and contrasting relationships can make colour appear to vibrate, giving otherwise static geometric shapes a sense of energy.
His abstract prints are particularly effective in contemporary interiors where bold colour and geometry can create a confident focal point. A composition containing green alongside several other hues can also help connect different colours already present within furniture, rugs and decorative accessories.
Featured Green Abstract Artists
Explore pioneering modern artists whose use of green, geometry, colour and organic form helped shape the development of abstract art.
Sage Green Abstract Prints
Sage green has become particularly popular in interiors because it introduces colour while remaining soft and restrained. Its grey undertone makes it easy to combine with white, cream, beige, taupe, pale wood and natural materials.
Sage green abstract prints are particularly suitable for bedrooms and living rooms where a calm atmosphere is desired. Geometric forms, soft washes and organic compositions can add visual interest without introducing the intensity of brighter colours.
Sage also works beautifully with dusty pink, muted blue, terracotta and ochre. An abstract artwork containing several of these tones can help bring together different textiles and furnishings within a room.
Emerald and Forest Green Abstract Wall Art
Emerald and forest green create a much stronger effect. These deeper shades can add richness and drama, particularly against white, cream, beige or pale grey walls.
A large emerald abstract print can become the main focal point above a sofa, fireplace or sideboard. Dark green also works particularly well with walnut, brass, black, tan leather and other warm materials.
For a more dramatic interior, combine deep green artwork with navy, charcoal or black. For a softer effect, balance it with cream, pale wood and natural linen.
Olive Green Abstract Prints
Olive green has a warmer and earthier character than sage or emerald. Its natural relationship with brown, beige and ochre makes it particularly suitable for interiors inspired by organic textures and muted colours.
Olive abstract art works well with natural wood, leather, linen, stone and ceramic. It can also provide an understated bridge between warmer and cooler colours within a room.
Abstract compositions containing olive, beige, black and cream can feel sophisticated and restrained, while the addition of rust, terracotta or mustard creates a warmer mid-century-inspired palette.
Green Geometric Abstract Prints
Geometric abstraction uses circles, squares, rectangles, lines and other constructed forms to organise colour. Green can be a dominant field, a smaller accent or part of a balanced multicoloured arrangement.
Kandinsky, Delaunay, Klee and Kupka all explored relationships between colour and form in distinctive ways. Some compositions feel highly ordered, while others use geometry more freely to create movement and rhythm.
Green geometric abstract prints are particularly effective in contemporary homes and offices because strong shapes complement clean furniture and uncluttered interiors. They can also work in more traditional rooms by creating deliberate contrast with older furnishings.
Organic Green Abstract Art
Not all green abstraction is geometric. Curving shapes, irregular forms and painterly areas of colour can suggest leaves, water, growth or landscapes without depicting any of them literally.
Organic abstraction is particularly well suited to green because the colour already carries strong associations with the natural world. A composition of rounded green forms may evoke vegetation or cells, while fluid blue-green shapes can suggest water and movement.
These artworks are excellent choices for rooms where you want a connection with nature without using a conventional botanical illustration or landscape painting.
Green Abstract Prints for Living Rooms
Green abstract wall art is an excellent choice for living rooms because it can introduce substantial colour while still feeling connected with nature. Large sage, olive, emerald and forest green compositions can create strong focal points above sofas, fireplaces and sideboards.
For a calm neutral living room, choose softer sage or olive artwork with cream, beige and muted tones. For greater drama, look for emerald or deep forest green combined with black, blue, gold or contrasting warmer colours.
A multicoloured abstract print containing green can also help connect several elements of the room. For example, green may repeat the colour of plants or upholstery while smaller areas of blue, pink or ochre relate to cushions, rugs and other accessories.
Large compositions are particularly effective on broad walls, while two or three smaller works can create a coordinated gallery arrangement.
Green Abstract Prints for Bedrooms
Green is one of the most natural choices for bedroom wall art because softer shades can contribute to a calm and restful atmosphere. Sage, mint, pale olive and blue-green are especially versatile.
For a peaceful bedroom, choose abstract art with balanced forms, muted colour and some visual breathing space. Softer works by Paul Klee or Hilma af Klint can be excellent starting points.
Green abstract prints pair beautifully with white bedding, cream, beige, linen, rattan, pale oak and soft grey. Dusty pink and muted blue can introduce gentle contrast without disrupting the restful palette.
A large framed print above the bed can create a clear focal point, while two smaller related artworks can form a balanced pair.
Green Abstract Prints for Dining Rooms and Offices
Dining rooms can accommodate stronger green artwork particularly well. Deep emerald, forest green and multicoloured abstract compositions can bring richness and personality to a wall above a sideboard or opposite the dining table.
In home offices and creative workspaces, green abstract art can introduce colour without the distraction of a literal narrative subject. Geometric compositions by Kandinsky, Kupka or Delaunay can add structure and energy, while quieter works by Klee or Hilma af Klint may create a more contemplative atmosphere.
What Colours Work with Green Abstract Art?
Green is extremely versatile because different shades create very different relationships with surrounding colours. Sage green works beautifully with cream, beige, blush pink and pale blue. Olive pairs naturally with brown, rust, terracotta and mustard, while emerald and forest green create stronger contrast with white, black, navy and gold tones.
Pink and red sit opposite green within traditional colour relationships and can create vivid contrast. Blue and turquoise produce a cooler, more harmonious palette, while natural wood and warm neutrals soften stronger green tones.
You do not need to match the artwork exactly to your furnishings. Instead, select one or two colours from the print and repeat them subtly elsewhere in the room through cushions, rugs, ceramics or smaller decorative details.
Choosing the Right Size Green Abstract Print
Large green abstract prints work particularly well above sofas, beds, fireplaces and sideboards. A substantial artwork can anchor the room and allow the composition's colour relationships and forms to be appreciated fully.
Medium-sized framed prints are useful above desks, consoles and smaller pieces of furniture. They can also be displayed in pairs where two compositions share a similar palette or artistic style.
Smaller abstract prints are ideal for gallery walls. You might combine works through a shared green palette or mix green abstract art with botanical prints, landscapes and other modern compositions.
Consistent framing can help create visual unity when several artworks are displayed together, particularly if the compositions contain different shades and styles.
Fine Art Prints, Framed Prints and Canvas Panels
GalleryThane green abstract artwork is available across a range of formats and sizes. Choose an unframed fine art paper print if you want the flexibility to select your own frame, a framed print for a complete gallery-style presentation, or a canvas panel for a clean, ready-to-hang finish.
Our prints, frames and canvas panels are handmade in our Nottinghamshire workshop using carefully selected fine art papers, UV-stabilised pigment inks and quality framing materials. Free UK delivery is available on all orders, with fast, tracked international shipping also available.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is green abstract art?
Green abstract art uses shades of green together with colour, shape, line, texture, geometry or gesture without necessarily representing the visible world realistically. Styles can range from soft organic compositions to bold geometric abstraction.
Which artists are famous for green abstract art?
Important abstract artists whose works frequently explore green and other strong colour relationships include Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Hilma af Klint, František Kupka and Robert Delaunay.
What shades of green are available in abstract art?
Green abstract prints can include sage, olive, emerald, forest green, mint, teal, turquoise and blue-green. Some works are dominated by one shade, while others combine several greens with contrasting colours.
What colours go well with green abstract prints?
Green abstract prints work beautifully with white, cream, beige, brown, black, charcoal, navy, pale blue, pink, terracotta, rust, ochre and natural wood. The best pairing depends on whether the artwork uses sage, olive, emerald or darker forest green.
Are green abstract prints suitable for living rooms?
Yes. Green abstract wall art is excellent for living rooms because it introduces colour while retaining a natural and versatile character. Large sage, emerald and forest green compositions work particularly well above sofas, fireplaces and sideboards.
Are green abstract prints good for bedrooms?
Yes. Soft sage, olive, mint and blue-green abstract prints can contribute to a calm bedroom atmosphere. They pair naturally with white, cream, beige, pale grey, linen and natural wood.
Should I choose a framed green abstract print or a canvas panel?
Choose a framed print for a structured, gallery-style presentation that clearly defines the artwork. Choose a canvas panel for a cleaner, frameless appearance that can work especially well with larger modern abstract compositions.
What size green abstract print should I choose?
Large prints are ideal above sofas, beds and sideboards, while medium-sized works suit smaller walls and furniture. Smaller abstract prints can be displayed in pairs, rows or gallery wall arrangements.












































































































































































































































































































































