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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.
The wave is enormous. The boats are struggling. Mount Fuji watches — and Nami glides right over it, as if this were the most natural thing in the world. Because it is. Cats are not stopped by forces of nature. Certainly not by waves. Hokusai captured the most dramatic moment in Japanese art — and Nami turned it into a Sunday stroll.
He doesn't arrive early. He doesn't arrive late. He arrives exactly when the room needs him — sunglasses, headphones, paw on the turntable, expression that says: I know what I'm doing, and you're about to find out. DJ Meow doesn't play sets. He sets the mood. For the evening. For the room. For the wall.
This is her spot. Not because anyone gave it to her — but because she sat down there one day and stayed. The sun traces its arc. The plants grow. Outside, the world goes on, and she watches — calm, attentive, entirely herself. Anyone who has a cat knows this moment. Anyone who has it on their wall has it forever.
She found the most beautiful spot — and of course it was exactly this one. Between monstera and hibiscus, red and orange and deep green, Flora sits and looks upward, as if she's just noticed something only she can see. Perhaps a butterfly. Perhaps the light. Perhaps simply the next moment, which will be just as beautiful as this one.
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 know they love cats. And you know they'll want to choose the picture themselves. The YES WE CAT gift voucher is made for exactly this moment — when you want to give someone real joy, but the final word on the motif belongs to them.
Delivered digitally by email, personalised with your own message, ready to use immediately. The hardest thing about a great gift is sometimes knowing when to pass the choice along. Here, that's the easiest part.
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.
He reads. He drinks. And he knows things — things you'd rather not know, and others he'll share with no one, because that's the power he holds. Meet Ser Whisker: bibliophile, connoisseur, and quiet believer that knowledge is the only currency that truly matters. This poster is for everyone who has ever looked at a cat and thought: I am, actually, that cat.
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?
She's not in a hurry. Not because she's running late — but because hurry is the opposite of style, and style is everything. Meet Caterina: Vespa rider, Tuscan native, and firm believer that life is at its best when the scarf is flying, the road is long, and nobody asks where you're going. Perhaps the pizzeria. Perhaps the vineyard. Perhaps nowhere in particular. Fa niente.
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.
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.
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.
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?