From $89
A dining room wall or the stretch behind a desk gets real depth from this landscape, where gold hills curve down into shadowed purple valleys and a path winds toward the horizon. Storm clouds pile up overhead in gray and white, with a break of teal sky showing through, so the composition never sits flat.
The gold against purple is the draw here, warm ground and cool sky working against each other instead of blending. It suits an office that wants something more layered than a standard sunset print, and it holds up in both bright and dim rooms since the color contrast does most of the work.
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Printed on archival-grade, poly-cotton blend canvas with fade-resistant inks rated to hold color for 75+ years. Gallery-wrapped and ready to hang straight out of the box.
Available in five sizes per orientation, from 12x16 up to 40x60 inches, as a 1.25 inch canvas wrap or with a black floating frame.
Free U.S. shipping on all orders. Printed and shipped from U.S.-based facilities. Most orders arrive within 5 to 10 business days.
Gold and amber hills curve across the lower half of the piece, their surfaces smooth and almost liquid, while purple and indigo settle into the low ground below them. A gray and white sky piles up overhead in heavy folds, with a patch of teal breaking through near the top. A path threads through the center, giving the eye somewhere to travel.
Good fit for a surreal landscape print for a dining room wall or a gold and purple canvas for an office corner that wants more than a standard nature scene. Read more in our home office decor guide.
It depends on the room, but the gold and purple combination tends to read as sophisticated rather than loud, since the shapes stay simple and the composition is balanced around a single central path. It works well in conference rooms that already lean modern or minimal.
There's no fixed story behind it. The path is there to pull your eye through the hills toward the horizon, giving the piece a sense of direction rather than a flat, static view. Most people read it simply as a road or trail cutting through the terrain.
This piece ships in the vertical format shown, which actually suits narrow walls, hallway ends, or the space beside a window better than a wide horizontal landscape would. It reads well in a taller gap where a wide piece wouldn't fit.