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How Big Should Your Art Be?

How to Size Art for Your Walls:  A Simple Guide for Sofas, Beds & Tables

If you’re thinking about ‘room size art’—art that feels sized correctly for the room as a whole—these same guidelines apply

 

The right size art can make a room feel intentional, pulled-together, and more “designer.” The wrong size—usually too small—can make even beautiful furniture look a bit lost.

 

As a modern abstract artist, I spend a lot of time thinking about how my art actually lives in real homes. This guide breaks down simple, practical rules you can use before you buy (or hang) your next piece.

Why Art Size Matters More Than Most People Think

 

When something feels “off” in a room, it’s very often one of three things:

  • The art is too small for the wall or furniture.

  • The art is hung too high.

  • There’s not enough visual weight to balance the rest of the room.

 

You might have a gorgeous sofa, a rug you love, and a beautiful abstract piece—but if the art is tiny over a big sofa, your eye reads it as accidental rather than intentional.

 

The good news? You don’t need a design degree to fix this. A couple of simple guidelines will do most of the heavy lifting.

The 2/3 Rule: A Simple Starting Point for Most Walls

 

Here’s the easiest rule of thumb to remember:

 

As a starting point, your art (or art grouping) should be about two-thirds the width of the furniture underneath it.

 

So if your sofa is 84" wide:

  • 2/3 of 84" is about 56".

  • That means a piece (or group of pieces) that measures around 50–60" wide will usually feel balanced.

 

This applies to:

  • Sofas

  • Beds (using the headboard width)

  • Credenzas, consoles and buffets

 

It’s not a strict law, but it’s a very reliable starting point. From there, you can go a little smaller or larger based on your taste and the room.

Sizing Art Over a Sofa

 

The wall over the sofa is one of the most important art spots in a home. Here’s how to get it right.

 

Ideal Width for Art Over a Sofa

 

Start by measuring the width of your sofa.

  • Typical sofa: 72"–90" wide

  • Aim for art that is about 2/3 the width of the sofa

    • For a 72" sofa → art around 48"–54" wide

    • For an 84" sofa → art around 54"–60" wide

 

This doesn’t have to be one single piece—your total visual width can come from:

  • One large statement piece, or

  • Two or three pieces arranged together as a group

 

The key is that the overall width of the art feels like it belongs with the sofa, not like a postage stamp on a big wall.

 

One Large Piece vs Two or Three Smaller Pieces

 

One large piece works well when:

  • You like a clean, minimal, modern look.

  • The rest of the room already has a lot going on (pillows, textures, shelves).

  • You want a strong, simple focal point.

 

Modern abstract works beautifully as a single statement—especially larger canvases that can carry the wall on their own.

 

Two or three pieces work well when:

  • You have a long sofa or sectional.

  • You like a more layered, “collected” look.

  • You already own a couple of smaller pieces you’d like to use together.

 

In that case, think of your art as a team:

  • Two pieces side by side that add up to your target width, or

  • Three pieces forming a simple row over the sofa

 

Even with multiple pieces, you still want the total width to land near that 2/3 guideline.

 

Vertical vs Horizontal Over the Sofa

 

Most people default to a horizontal piece over the sofa, which makes sense—it echoes the shape of the furniture.

 

But a vertical piece can work if:

  • You have a narrower wall at the end of a sectional

  • There’s a column of wall between two windows

  • You’re intentionally playing with contrast: tall art over long furniture

 

In that case, you want the height of the piece to create the drama, while the width still feels substantial enough not to look like a little bookmark on a big wall.

Sizing Art Over a Bed

 

The rules are similar for beds, with a few extra details.

 

How Wide Should Art Be Over a Bed?

 

Again, start with the headboard width.

  • Full bed: ~54" wide

  • Queen bed: ~60" wide

  • King bed: ~76"–80" wide

 

Aim for art that’s about 2/3 the width of the headboard, or slightly more if you like a bolder look:

  • Over a queen → art around 40"–48" wide

  • Over a king → art around 50"–60" wide

 

This can be:

  • One large horizontal piece

  • Two medium pieces side by side

  • A triptych of three smaller pieces

 

Single Piece vs a Pair Above the Headboard

 

One piece over the bed

  • Feels calm, restful, and grounding

  • Great for abstract art in softer, soothing palettes

 

A pair of pieces (one over each nightstand)

  • Works well if you have taller nightstands and lamps

  • Creates a rhythm and symmetry that feels hotel-like and polished

  • Each piece does not have to be huge—what matters is that together they relate to the bed width

 

Height Considerations in the Bedroom

 

A few easy rules:

  • Don’t hang art so low that pillows bump it.

  • Leave a bit of space between the headboard and the frame so the wall can “breathe.”

  • In bedrooms, slightly lower art can feel more intimate, as most of your time is spent sitting or lying down.

Sizing Art in Dining Areas

 

Dining rooms are often where art feels either too tiny or completely forgotten.

 

Art Over a Dining Table

 

Here’s a helpful trick:

 

Center your art on the table, not the wall, if the table isn’t perfectly centered on the wall.

That way, the art relates to the furniture people actually use, instead of an arbitrary wall centerline.

 

Use the same 2/3 rule:

  • If your table is 72" long → art width around 48"–54" feels good.

 

Avoiding the “Too Small” Dining Room Syndrome

 

Dining rooms are notorious for having one lonely little piece of art floating in space.

 

If you have:

  • A large wall

  • A long table

  • A sideboard or buffet

 

Then that wall can usually handle something bigger than you think—either:

  • One bold, large abstract

  • A pair of pieces centered above the buffet

  • A linear gallery of 3 evenly spaced works

 

When to Go Extra-Large in Open Concept Spaces

 

In open-plan living areas, it’s easy for art to get lost.

 

A larger piece can:

  • Visually define the dining zone

  • Anchor the table in a big open space

  • Pull together colors from the living and kitchen areas

 

Think of the art as the “headline” marking where the dining area begins.

When Small Art Works Beautifully

 

All this talk of big pieces doesn’t mean small art is wrong—it just needs the right context.

 

Smaller Pieces in Tight Spaces

 

Small or medium art shines in:

  • Hallways

  • Between windows

  • Next to a doorway

  • Over a small console or accent chair

 

Here, the architecture naturally limits your wall area, so a smaller piece feels just right.

 

Stacking Art Vertically

 

If you have a tall, narrow wall (for example, between two doors), try a vertical stack of 2–3 pieces:

  • Same size

  • Same frames

  • Equal spacing

This creates a strong, architectural column of art that uses the height of the space.

 

Creating Mini Vignettes with Small Art

 

Small art works beautifully when it’s part of a story:

  • Leaning on a shelf next to books and objects

  • Above a petite cabinet with a lamp below

  • Paired with a mirror or sculptural object

 

The secret is that the whole vignette carries visual weight, not just the frame.

Common Mistakes to Avoid with Art Size

 

You’ll already be ahead of most people if you avoid these three traps:

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  1. Art that’s narrower than half the sofa width

    • This is the classic “too small over the sofa” look.

  2. One tiny piece floating on a huge empty wall

    • If the wall is large, either size up or build a grouping.

  3. Multiple tiny pieces scattered instead of grouped

    • Instead of spreading them out, bring them closer together so they read as one visual unit.

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If something looks “off,” step back, take a photo on your phone, and look at the proportions. A quick change in size or grouping often fixes the whole room.​

Bringing It All Together: Choosing the Right Size for Your Space

 

Here’s a simple checklist you can use before you buy or hang:

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  1. Measure your furniture

    • Sofa, bed, dining table, or console.

  2. Apply the 2/3 rule

    • Look for art (or groupings) that roughly hit that width.

  3. Decide: one big piece, or several working together?

    • One for clean drama, multiple for a layered, collected feel.

  4. Check the height

    • Keep the art visually connected to the furniture, not floating far above it.

  5. Adjust based on your room

    • High ceilings, narrow walls, or open plans may call for going a touch larger.

 

If you’re choosing modern abstract art, don’t be afraid of size. Bold, well-scaled pieces tend to make a home feel more curated and intentional—like a space designed, not just decorated.

 

And if you’d like inspiration, you can browse my abstracts at Marvin Studios Modern Art, where I show many pieces in room settings so you can imagine how the size and scale might work in your own home.

A Quick Note About Framing

 

Choosing the right frame can completely transform how your art looks in your home. I recommend PictureFrames.com—they are artist-founded, USA-made since 1965, and producing museum-quality frames for decades. It’s where I buy my own frames, and I’m proud to partner with them.
 

If you order through the link below, I may earn a small commission—at no extra cost to you.

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