From $89
Electric blue and burnt orange collide across this tiger's fragmented face, a combination that reads well against warm wood tones or a charcoal accent wall. The geometric color blocking breaks the big cat down into angular planes rather than a naturalistic portrait, so the piece leans more toward abstract art than wildlife decor.
It works in a living room that wants a focal point without leaning on a single flat color, and a home office short on structure on a plain wall benefits from it too. Sizes run from 16x12 up to 60x40, with a canvas wrap or black floating frame depending on the room.
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Printed on archival-grade, poly-cotton blend canvas with fade-resistant inks rated to hold color for 75+ years. Gallery-wrapped and ready to hang straight out of the box.
Available in five sizes per orientation, from 12x16 up to 40x60 inches, as a 1.25 inch canvas wrap or with a black floating frame.
Free U.S. shipping on all orders. Printed and shipped from U.S.-based facilities. Most orders arrive within 5 to 10 business days.
Electric Tiger Blues takes a close-up tiger portrait and rebuilds it from angular color blocks instead of brushwork, so the eyes and whisker lines still read clearly even as the surrounding planes shift into blue, orange, and violet. It's a digital-abstract treatment rather than a painterly one, which gives the edges a sharper, almost stained-glass quality.
A geometric tiger canvas for living rooms like this works best on a wall that already leans modern, since the fragmented shapes can clash with heavily patterned furniture. For more animal subjects treated with the same bold color approach, see our bold abstract collection. Framed correctly, it also reads as a fragmented big cat wall art piece in a home office.
Yes. The electric blue and orange in this fragmented tiger portrait sit well against beige, charcoal, or warm wood tones because the geometric shapes carry most of the contrast. A neutral wall lets the color blocking read clearly instead of competing with a busy background.
It's abstract. The tiger's face is recognizable in outline, but the geometric fragmentation and bold color blocking push it away from a straightforward wildlife portrait and into contemporary abstract art, closer to what you'd hang alongside modern geometric pieces than a nature print.
That depends on the room. The wrap keeps the fragmented tiger design running edge to edge for a cleaner look, while the floating frame adds a defined border that can ground the piece on a busier gallery wall.