A hallway is the first thing people see, and abstract art makes a strong first impression without needing a literal subject. The work is sizing it for a narrow wall and picking one piece that sets the tone for the home.
A hallway sets the tone for the whole home, so it can take a bolder piece than you might expect. Abstract art works here because it reads as modern and confident without competing with furniture there is none of. Pick one strong piece and let it lead. See the full abstract wall art range, or black and gold for a luxe entryway.
Hallways are narrow, so a vertical piece or a row of smaller works suits the space better than one wide canvas. Hang at eye level and leave even gaps. A single statement piece works at the end of a hall where it draws the eye down the corridor. Browse everything made for the hallway.
A hallway takes a bold piece well. A strong abstract sets the tone for the whole home.
Hallways are often short on natural light, so lean toward pieces that hold up under lamps. Gold and metallic accents catch artificial light well, while high-contrast black and white reads clearly in a dim corridor. Keep the walls plain so the art carries.
Bold gestural pieces feel modern and confident, gold and metallic abstracts read as luxe, and softer, tonal work keeps a hallway calm. Match the piece to the rest of the home so the entry feels connected. The wider modern art range fits well here.
Go vertical for a narrow wall, or hang a row of smaller pieces at even spacing.