Oil Painting Wallpaper
Artistic Detail That Completes the Room
Wallmur’s oil painting wallpaper collection brings painted texture, depth, and warmth to your space. With options like florals, landscapes, and vintage compositions, these designs add contrast without dominating the room.
Each piece is created to work with real interiors - not just for style, but for comfort. A beautiful oil painting wallpaper makes the space feel curated, not crowded.
Designed for Every Room
Whether it’s a living room wall or a quiet corner in the bedroom, these wallpapers bring a sense of balance.
For simple spaces, an abstract oil painting wallpaper adds energy without noise. For more layered rooms, textured brushstrokes help tie elements together.
You don’t have to redesign the room - oil painting wallpapers can shift the focus with just one surface.
Color That Changes How You Feel
Walls affect the way we experience a room. A small change - tone, texture, movement - makes the space feel fresh and intentional.
Adding one oil painting wallpaper creates that shift. It’s fast, affordable, and doesn’t require anything else to work.
From Cave Walls to Today
Humans have used paint to transform spaces for over 17,000 years. The earliest known examples come from the Lascaux caves in France and Altamira in Spain, painted with iron oxide.
Later, in the Early Christian era, red ocher was used to decorate stone churches - an early form of architectural expression.
This need to shape space with color hasn’t changed. We still seek beauty, calm, and meaning - only now, we do it with wallpaper.
Living rooms, dining areas, a headboard wall, an entry panel, and a study backdrop. Use the wall seen on entry or the one behind an anchor piece so the image reads clearly, and keep nearby surfaces quiet. Browse more painterly designs in our art wallpaper collection.
In small rooms, or when the print is high contrast, one wall is the safer choice. Larger, bright spaces can take multiple walls if the palette is restrained and the brushwork is soft; keep seams away from key strokes.
Abstract prints fit modern and minimal. Tonal landscapes suit transitional rooms. Soft, muted brush textures work with Scandinavian and Japandi schemes. Classic still lifes pair with traditional furniture and simple mouldings.
Set a base of cream, ivory, or warm grey. Lift one or two hues from the print for accents, for example, navy, bottle green, oxblood, or ochre. Choose one metal throughout, brass for warmth or blackened steel for a sharper outline.