Artist Cats
Artist Cats – Cats in the Style of the Great Masters
What if famous artists had painted cats?
In our “Artist Cats” collection, cats meet the great styles of art history—from Impressionism to Modernism to Pop Art.
Here you’ll find cats in the style of Vincent van Gogh, Claude Monet, Frida Kahlo, Pablo Picasso, and many other artists. Each cat interprets a well-known style in its own charming way.
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Mondrian wanted absolute order. This cat had other plans.
Piet Mondrian believed in order. In lines that put everything in its rightful place. In red, blue and yellow as the only truths one needs. He would never have painted a cat — because cats don't respect lines. They simply cross them. Which is exactly what this one does: she sits right in the middle of his system, looks out beyond the grid, and those yellow eyes ask, very calmly: What order?
She never asks for attention—she simply owns the room. With bold colors and a calm, confident gaze, this cat brings personality and modern style into any space.
Inspired by iconic pop art aesthetics, the artwork blends humor, attitude, and feline charm into a striking statement piece. Perfect for cat lovers with a love for color and contemporary design.
Late at night. Outside, the city. Inside, the warm light, the empty counter, the quiet hum of the night. And she—melancholic, alone, her thoughts elsewhere. Some people are sitting in diners at this hour. Some are looking out the windows. Some are simply awake, without knowing why. This cat knows the feeling—and she doesn’t need words for it.
Rothko wanted his paintings to make you feel. Silence. Weight. The unspeakable rendered in colour. What he didn't want — or at least didn't plan for — was this cat. She just looks. Curious, sudden, with that expression that asks: "Are you still there?" And just like that, the existential weight lifts, and you're smiling instead. Perhaps that's the deepest emotion of all.
He hates water. Everyone knows that. But Claude the Cat is also an adventurer — and when he heard that a certain Claude Monet had painted a pond that sounded a little like it might be named after him, his mind was made up.
Now he moves through the water lilies, tail held high, eyes steady and bright — absolutely certain that this was his plan all along.
She is the kind of cat that transforms a room simply by being there. Resting peacefully among soft colors, plants, and sunlight, she brings calmness and quiet elegance into modern spaces.
Inspired by the iconic cut-out aesthetics of Matisse, this artwork blends minimalist design with the comforting presence of a cat.
A perfect piece for interiors that value warmth, simplicity, and beauty.
Warhol said everyone gets their moment. This cat decided her moment is simply always. Pink, blue, orange, purple — no need to choose, she wears it all at once.
Long fur, short patience for anyone who doesn't immediately notice how extraordinary she is. Yes, she's fabulous. She's always known that.
Paul Klee dissolved the world into colour and form — and somewhere in between, she appeared. One eye orange, one yellow-green, and with a look as if she'd just thought something very interesting and then immediately forgotten it.
This isn’t a serious portrait. It’s pure joy in color.
He wears the scarf with a nonchalance that has to be earned. The sky behind him swirls in blue and green, the stars burn as always — and Vincent the Cat looks at you with that expression that reveals everything and nothing at once. Those who look closely might notice: the ears don't quite match. A small detail. A quiet homage. Nothing more.
He always stood alone on that rock. That's what we learned. That's what we remembered. But perhaps we weren't looking closely enough — because there, to his left, she sits. Still. Upright. Her gaze fixed on the same sea of clouds. She doesn't ask where the journey leads. She's simply there. The way cats always are — quietly, naturally, and exactly where it matters.
Cubism wanted to break the world into all its parts — and then see what remained. What remains is her. Assembled plane by plane, green into grey into white, and out of all that geometry: a gaze that doesn't care about any of it. Some cats resist being reduced to shapes. This one simply made the shapes her own.
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