meta-pixel
Trending now
Slide 1 of 22
Slide 1 of 22
Slide 1 of 2
Home and Interiors

Creative Ways To Start a Gallery Wall

By Anna Hale
10.03.2026

Gallery walls have moved on from rigid grids and perfectly matched frames. The most interesting ones mix artwork, objects and unexpected pieces to create something layered and expressive. We’ve pulled together five creative ideas for building a gallery wall that feels considered and full of character.

Image: Source unknown, found via @cosmos
Image: @merit_la
A Colour Story

One colour family. Layered, not matching. Let terracotta shift from dusty to burnt, or butter yellow go soft then warm across prints, a vintage poster, something painted, maybe a fabric scrap you liked too much to throw away. Frames in wood, brass, lacquer. Mixed, never uniform. When it starts feeling too considered, a wall light or small shelf breaks it up.

Image: The dining area in artist Lucie de Moyencourt's Cape Town home. Photo by Greg Cox
Image: @kabinettandkammer

Not Just Frames

Plates. Woven pieces. A sconce. A framed textile. Small paintings. A gallery wall works harder when you mix flat art with things that have dimension. The contrast is what makes it feel collected rather than curated.

Image: Source unknown, found via @pinterest
Image: @tash_lickcolour

Start Big

One large piece, slightly off-centre. Everything else builds around it. Smaller works, sketches, a photograph or two. Leave space. The oversized anchor is what stops a gallery wall from looking like you just filled a wall, and starts making it look like you meant it.

Image: Interior of Villa Il Palazzetto in Rome, former office of Alessandro Michele. Photo by Paolo Abate
Image: Source unknown, found via @pinterest

A Grid, But Looser

Same spacing, different sizes. Photography next to illustration next to something typographic, a vintage find, maybe a mirror or a small sculptural piece that breaks the pattern just enough. Structured without being rigid. The one unexpected piece is usually what people comment on.

Image: Art and objects on display in the home of designer Francesco Balzano
Image: Source unknown, found via @pinterest
Start With a Shelf

Before committing to a wall of nails, try a picture ledge or two. Lean things. Overlap them slightly. Mix artwork with postcards, a small sculpture, a book with a good spine. Rotate it when you feel like it. It stays loose, which means it never really goes stale.

SHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ARTSHOP ART

Related Stories