Black Cats
Black Cats – Mysterious, Elegant, and Simply Unforgettable
Black cats have a very special aura.
They are mysterious, elegant, and often a bit quirky—and that’s exactly what makes them so fascinating.
In this collection, you’ll find unique cat posters and cat art featuring black cats in a wide variety of styles: sometimes calm and stylish, sometimes playful or with a touch of whimsy.
Maybe you’ll find the perfect cat that reminds you of your own.
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She's not skimming headlines. She's not in a hurry. She has a newspaper, a pink toilet, three cacti, and absolutely nowhere to be.
Meet Madame Noir: art critic, opinion leader, and committed morning person — as long as nobody knocks.
This warmly painted scene captures one of those quiet, absurd moments that only cat owners truly know: the bathroom is not yours. It never was.
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.
No campaign needed. No promises, no debates. Just that look — and you already know: this cat is in charge.
"Yes We Cat" is our founding statement, our manifesto, and a portrait of a cat who probably always knew she was destined for greatness.
Inspired by the iconic Obama Hope poster, with that unmistakable palette of red, teal, and cream — and a gaze that commands any room it's in.
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.
Calm, confident, and completely unbothered, this black cat drives the Berlin subway as if it has always been in charge.
The playful artwork blends urban Berlin vibes with the effortless coolness cats seem to master naturally. Warm colors and clean graphic lines give the print a modern and stylish feel.
A perfect wall art piece for cat lovers, Berlin fans, and anyone who appreciates a cat with absolute confidence.
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.
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.
In 1932, eleven ironworkers sat on a steel beam above Manhattan and ate their lunch. The photographers marvelled. The workers shrugged. Decades later, seven cats have claimed the same beam — and shrug accordingly, insofar as that's anatomically possible. New York has changed. The height hasn't. And the certainty that this spot belongs to you hasn't either.
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.
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.
In 1969, four men crossed a zebra crossing in London. The world took notice. Decades later, four cats cross the same stripes — no rehearsal, no discussion, no asking anyone's permission. The formation works anyway. Because some things just do. Because some roads are made to be crossed. And because cats have always known where they're going — even when nobody else does.
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.
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.
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 needs no army. No fleet. No Death Star. Just that look — and you already know who's in charge.
Darth Vader shook the galaxy. Cat Vader has bigger things to attend to: your sofa, your sleep schedule, and whatever remained of your belief that you run this household. The dark side is calling. It sounds exactly like purring.
She looks forward — but somewhere inside her the pines stand, the mist settles, the forest breathes in its oldest silence. Cats carry worlds within them that we cannot see. Forests no human has ever entered. This double exposure makes visible what every cat person has always sensed: that within this creature lives something larger than the space it occupies. Still. Deep. Entirely itself.
Magritte said: this is not a pipe. He meant: a painting of a pipe is not the pipe itself. What he didn't anticipate — every cat person already knows this. This is not a cat. This is a personality. A feeling. A creature that sits on your face at four in the morning and is entirely in the right to do so. Having a picture of it on your wall changes nothing. It only confirms it.