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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Nobody knows if the sun is rising or setting. She might know. But she won't say. She sits on the rock, the sea below her, the sky before her — and needs nothing more. No answers. No company. Only this moment, which could be beginning or end, and the perfect silence that lies between.
Meet Coco: street artist, free spirit, and quiet expert in saying big things with small gestures.
Inspired by Banksy's iconic "Balloon Girl", this piece shows a cat reaching for a red heart balloon — or letting it go. That's for you to decide.
Black on weathered concrete, one single touch of red: sometimes that's all it takes to say something that stays with you.
A lone cat sits above the rooftops of Berlin, gazing into a glowing night sky filled with stars, moonlight, and quiet wonder.
Inspired by the dreamlike beauty of Van Gogh, this artwork blends the city skyline with the peaceful mystery of a midnight moment. Warm windows below and the luminous sky above create an atmosphere of calm, longing, and gentle beauty.
A meaningful art print for cat lovers who see the quiet soul behind every feline gaze.
Chagall never distinguished between dream and reality — for him they were the same thing, just in different colours. This cat lives in that world. Blue over black over white, red as a whisper, yellow as a glow — and from the middle of it all: those eyes, looking out as if they've already seen everything there is to see, and still find it wondrous.
Some paintings you dream. This one dreams back.
The intersection outside is empty. The traffic light changes anyway. The coffee is going cold — but that doesn't matter now, because she's been looking for a while, and she'll keep looking. Not because there's something out there. But because the outside is sometimes just like that: quiet, wide, and somehow full of things you can't quite name. Hopper painted this hour. The cat knows it too.
6:03 am. Breakfast was supposed to be served at 6:00.
Meet Luna: virtuoso of inner drama, master of the wordless accusation, and firm believer that three minutes late is a catastrophe of historic proportions.
Munch painted this moment — he just didn't know it was inspired by a cat. Now you do.
Some beings need no frame. No ornament. No colour begging for attention. This cat is black — and that is all she needs. Geometric, still, with yellow eyes that glow like two lights in a quiet night.
The Bauhaus wanted to reduce beauty to its essence. This cat has never known it any other way.
Blue was Franz Marc's colour for the masculine, the spiritual, the austere. He never painted a cat — but if he had, she would have looked like this. Angular and soft at once. Geometric and alive. Those two orange eyes burning through all that blue — steady, direct, without flinching. A cat who doesn't want to be looked at. But one that looks.
Some moments feel almost sacred – like the quiet connection between a human and a cat.
Inspired by Michelangelo’s iconic Renaissance composition, this artwork places a small tabby cat at the center of a tender and timeless encounter. The playful reinterpretation blends classical art with the emotional bond cat lovers know so well.
A meaningful art print for anyone who believes the love of a cat is something truly extraordinary.
Klimt dipped everything in gold — skin, robe, soul. Those who belong in his world shine from within. This cat shines. Spiral by spiral, circle by circle, she has merged with the world behind her — and yet looks out from it, teal eyes steady, completely calm, completely herself.
This cat knows that it is the most precious element in the picture.
She wears flowers because she wants to. She looks at you because she decides to. Frida la Gata never cared what others expected of her — and you can see exactly that. Between cacti and blossoms, in colours more beautiful than words, she sits: completely herself, completely present, completely unbothered. Some cats are simply art. This one knows it.
You love cats and like the famous masterpiece "The Great Wave off Kanagawa" by Katsushika Hokusai? Then you've found just the thing for you: A pawsome wall picture that will bring a smile to your face every day.
Be inspired by this funny cat picture in the style of Hokusai.
Whether as a poster, framed picture or canvas print: Look forward to this beautiful cat wall picture and transform your room into a place to purr! :)
Hundertwasser believed the straight line was godless. That colour should know no measure. That a painting must live — breathe, grow, unfold like something organic. This cat understood. She sits in her own world of mosaic and spirals, circles and arches — and looks out with the calm gaze of someone who knows that beauty needs no boundaries. Only colour. And time.
Modigliani painted people as if they had stepped out of time — still, elongated, self-contained, with a gaze that knows more than it tells. This cat belongs in that world as if by birthright. Upright, unmoving, yellow eyes that know exactly what's going on inside you. He says nothing. He doesn't need to. Some portraits speak for themselves — and some cats do too.
Mysterious, graceful, and quietly captivating, this artwork gives the black cat the presence of a timeless masterpiece. Inspired by the beauty of classical portrait painting, it combines elegant composition with the striking charm of a feline muse.
The soft lighting, refined details, and iconic pearl create a sophisticated statement piece for any interior. A perfect art print for cat lovers who see beauty, character, and quiet majesty in every cat.
Tamara de Lempicka painted women who asked no one for permission. Colours that knew no apology. Forms that took what was theirs. This cat would have been her perfect subject. Teal and orange, green and red — all at once, all intentional, all with that gaze that says: I am already exactly where I want to be. And you?
If you like René Magritte's style-defining paintings and you love cats, then you've found just the thing for you: a pawsome wall picture that will bring a smile to your face every day.
Be inspired by this cheeky cat painting in the style of Magritte's famous "Ceci n'est pas une pipe".
Whether as a poster, framed picture or canvas print: Look forward to this beautiful cat wall picture and transform your room into a place to purr! :)
For centuries, people have stood before this smile and wondered. Art historians wrote. Philosophers speculated. Tourists stared. But the answer was always there — she simply had a cat in her arms. Anyone holding a purring ginger tom smiles like that. Everyone knows this. Leonardo too.