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Gallery wall art sets take the guesswork out of creating cohesive displays. Pieces designed to work together, with matching styles, complementary colors, and coordinated sizing. Install a gallery wall that looks intentional from the start... read more
Wall art sets solve a common problem. Picking individual pieces that work together takes time and an eye for design. Our sets are curated to look good as a group, whether you hang them in a row, a grid, or staggered arrangement.
Where sets work
Matching wall art works particularly well in hallways and above sofas. Long walls benefit from multiple coordinated pieces that create rhythm. Sets of three or five are classic configurations that balance most spaces.
Canvas art sets also work well in offices and bedrooms. The cohesion feels polished without requiring much decision-making. If you're filling a large wall and want a unified look, sets are the efficient choice.
For individual pieces, browse our abstract collection or living room wall art.
Find answers to common questions about our art collections, color palettes, and more
It depends on the wall size, but most gallery wall sets work well with 3 to 7 pieces. A set of 3 is clean and simple. Five to seven pieces fill a larger wall and give you room to play with layout. Start with a matching wall art set so the pieces are already coordinated, then add singles if you want more coverage.
Two to three inches between frames is the standard for gallery wall art. Go tighter (1.5 inches) for a salon-style look, wider (4 inches) for a more open, modern feel. Consistency matters more than the exact number. Use painter's tape on the wall first to test your layout. Our Living Room Wall Art collection has matching wall art sets sized for common wall dimensions.
No. In fact, a little variation looks more intentional than perfect matching. Art sets that share a color palette or theme but differ in composition keep things interesting. What ties a gallery wall together is usually the frame style or a shared mood, not identical subjects. Gallery wall sets give you that built-in coordination with enough variety to avoid looking flat.
Above the sofa is the most common spot, and it works. But don't overlook the wall behind a reading chair, a long hallway, or the space above a console table. Gallery wall art sets look best when centered on a piece of furniture or a focal area. Check our Large Wall Art collection if you need a single statement piece instead.
Yes, and that's one of the best ways to build a gallery wall that feels personal. Start with a gallery wall set as your anchor, then fill in gaps with pieces you already have. Match frame colors or widths to keep it cohesive. A matching wall art set gives you a foundation so the additions feel like part of a plan.
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