These dark green wall art artists draw inspiration from nature to express serenity and positivity.
Dark green wall art is classical and can be paired with a variety of colors, including neutrals, pinks, yellows and oranges, purples, or blues. The color green inspires optimism, serenity, and security. According to psychologists, green is regarded as the most restful and relaxing color for the human eye, as it also generates a therapeutic ambiance for humans.
If you gravitate towards art that expresses serenity and positivity, look no further.
These 18 Dark Green Wall Artists May Have The Style You’re Looking For
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1. Andrea Lungan
Andrea Lungan is a Romanian artist who lives and works in Bucharest. She holds both a BA and MA degree from the National University of Arts where she specialized in abstract painting. In her works, she focuses on spontaneity and free expression. As an artist, she aims to transform inner agitation, anxiety, and anger into abstract expression. Her projects are part of a series of works, each focusing on shape and color. In the “Zoom in” series, the shape is subordinated to the color, so the paste and texture have an important role in creating the compositions. At this level of expression, the colors dictate the atmosphere and talk about moods, thus using their impressive quality.
2. Emma Pesti
Emma Pesti developed her art from classical landscapes with a realistic approach and color palette to a more abstract style. “Although my painting is highly abstracted, one may discover worlds in the details – remote mountains, rivers, and lakes, vast terrain, the sun, the moon,” Emma says. Furthermore, she tries to evoke the emotions of her viewers to keep their consciousness alive and active. “I want to encourage them to step out of their comfort zone,” she says. “I want them to be involved, to discover, and to transcend being a mere viewer, then become an active part of my art, to be inside of the painting, a resident of my world.”
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3. Katerina Belaya
Katerina Belaya is a landscape painter from Russia. She has always been fascinated by nature since childhood and prefers to paint in the open air. “I enjoy portraying nature as joyful and bright as I see it,” Katerina says. “Wherever I am, I bring my scenic impressions from there.” Over the years of constant research and work, Katerina has created more than 1000 sketches of sunsets, sunrises, snowdrifts, and flowering fields.
4. Pavlo Gryniuk
Pavlo Gryniuk’s journey into painting started in childhood. Since then, art has remained an integral part of his life. “Throughout this time, I was developing my personal style and vision, and this process is far from over,” he says. Pavlo intends to create exceptional art that could be regarded as classics. To achieve this, he tries to avoid unnecessary details while he concentrates on placing attention on the most important.
5. Teimuraz Gagnidze
Teimuraz Gagnidze is a Georgian artist who has participated in over 100 international and national exhibitions. His works can be found in the Tretiakov Gallery and the ministry of culture in several countries. They include Georgia, Russia, Ukraine, Kazakstan, and Bulgaria. Also, his works have been collected by several private collectors in the USA, France, Holland, Germany, Japan, England, Turkey, Greece, etc.



6. Anne Smythe
Anne Smythe wants her imagery to extend beyond the realm of classic landscapes or still-life in order to create a degree of anarchy. Her source of inspiration lies in the natural forms and landscapes in her surroundings. In the works below, Anne makes a painting of the woods near her home. In this, she references the shimmering and beautiful appearance of the dandelions within the vegetation despite the fact they are unwelcome there.
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7. Goce Ilievski
Goce Ilievski is an artist with a wide spectrum of creative techniques and approaches. His base is traditional art while his primary medium is oil, though he also works in other mediums and digital art. Also, his artistic essence lies in light and color. “Working with subjects from my everyday life like night urban landscapes, I started to develop a way to show that there is a movement behind everything in the Universe,” he says. “Underneath each color and shape in the earth and the universe as a whole, there is far more complex and deeper energy and meaning.” He believes that each artistic creation is a projection of the artist’s subconscious which is expressed during his lifetime.
8. Leni Winkelmann
Leni Winkelmann sought access to painting from a young age. Over the years, this quest has helped her to intensify and refine her technical skills. Her paintings consist of figurative and abstract themes, with her a focal theme of landscapes.
9. Peggy Lee
Peggy Lee is an artist and art educator who discovers subtleties and complexities each time she creates and teaches art. Over the years of her practice, she has explored different themes with an emphasis on society and technology. “Art is not always about the showcase,” she says. Rather, it is a symbol and imprint on the lives of its creators and the collection of diverse audiences to bring about the ultimate key to unify us, which is communication.”
10. Yulia Zarubin
Yulia Zarubin is a Russian artist currently living in the US. Her art is a delicate observation and exploration of regular objects. She believes there is hidden magic in every moment, in every simple object, in all that is around. Yulia says, “Allowing ourselves to be fully present and to feel the surroundings rather than think and analyze, gives us a chance to experience the world around us beyond name and form.”



Just like Goldfish in Asian culture, they are considered to be the most sacred and prosperity bringing fishes of all.
11. Carmen Montero
For Carmen Montero, nature is a continuous source of inspiration. She likes to investigate with textures to get closer to the desired result, and also to make the piece more magnificent. In addition, she often combines organic shapes with geometric motifs. “I work by thematic series, always around nature or figure,” Carmen says. “I try to make each work original and unique by maintaining coherence without it being the most important thing.”
12. Jean-Philippe Brunaud
Jean-Philippe Brunaud is a French painter who has exhibited in several countries including Morocco, Germany, Spain, and Belgium. One of the recurring themes in his works is memory. Throughout his artistic career, spanning over 25 years, Brunaud has approached this subject consciously or unconsciously in various forms. “With the greatest sincerity, I seek to detect, to unravel what is hidden within me, around me, before my eyes, to better see the world in which I live, and share it in return,” Brunaud says. He works mostly in series and this question of memory has found its expression in depictions of traces, faces and inner bodies, ghosts, as well as landscapes.
13. Matthew Farrar
Matthew Farrar developed his relationship with the lens through an apprenticeship program. He found his safe space within the dark rooms of the old Victorian railway station in Brighton, England. After interning in the largest commercial studio outside of London, he pursued opportunities in his other field of interest, music. This pursuit took him through several of the world’s greatest cities as the urge to document his travels revived his affection for photography. His work is an insight into how the eyes feed the mind and the deconstruction of structure into patterns. Matthew says, “It was ultimately fine art photography that grabbed me. I wanted people to see what I was seeing in its abstract form. The study of something quite simple could be missed by others and I felt the need to bring these images to light.”
14. Pia Kintrup
Pia Kintrup started noticing her interest in other forms of art aside from photography, at the beginning of her studies. She’s bound somewhere between the two and the three-dimensional. “I like to go into space and also to leave the flatness of photography,” Pia says. “I mean, as photography shortens the perspective and transforms everything into one layer, which is a specific quality I’m also interested in, I like still life in photography, but I also like the ‘still life aspect’ in sculptures.” She uses the medium of photography to transform the three into the two dimensional, therefore fixing a particular perspective. Moreover, her inspiration comes from everywhere. Pia says, “I love to travel, and fortunately, I got the chance to travel a lot. I’m interested in cultural differences and connections as well. My inspiration comes from everyday life as I like to observe it.”
15. David Ybañez
David Ybañez is an artist and illustrator based in El Paso, Texas, USA. His focus is divided between painting and/or drawing in a surrealistic detailed manner with a more abstract and minimalistic approach in other works. He’s always had a fascination with the surreal, abstract, and avant-garde, since his youthful days. “I create what my mind’s eye hasn’t fully envisioned but intuitively know as if I must decipher the subject through the process of bringing it into the physical realm,” David says.



10 W x 8 H x 1.5 D inch
Resin, Alcohol Ink, Sumi Ink, Marker
I wanted to create a strange and colorful cactus landscape but with an industrial-like background. This mixed-media painting on Yupo paper was mounted on a 1.5″ thick pinewood panel. So no frame is needed. High-gloss resin finish makes the colors pop and gives a dimensional depth effect.
16. Joncquil De Vries
Joncquil De Vries believes that the interpretation of a form, an image, or a word, depends not only on the creator but also on the knowledge of the viewer. Although he studied painting, he believes that every work has its own form. He says, “In my practice, I paint, make sculptures, installations, photographs, performances, and videos. All works are connected in an ongoing narrative.” And, He allows the narrative to evolve through numerous iterations. “You could say that the narrative unfolds itself in a non-chronological way,” Joncquil says. “Works from 2020 could easily precede or revalidate works from 2010.”
17. Norunn Mølsæter
Norunn Mølsæter draws inspiration from nature. As an artist who grew up on a farm, she learned to respect nature in every way possible. “I am an animal lover and my pets have all been and still are rescue animals,” she says. “I also love to grow and cook my own food, as natural health is of my interest as well.” Norunn’s art embodies the colorful, the positive, the tranquil, and the semi-abstract. She says, “I seek to create art that gives positive energy, time for contemplation, beauty, and peace of mind.”
18. Prapat Jiwarangsan
Prapat Jiwarangsan is a visual artist\NFT artist and filmmaker from Thailand. Usually, he incorporates a variety of media including photography and video to investigate and represent the relationships between history, memory, and politics in Thailand—particularly in relation to the theme of migration. “For this collection, ‘The Asylum,’ I was inspired by a young Burmese migrant worker whom I met years ago when I lived in my old house,” Prapat says. “He is a gardener who came to Thailand illegally, but we both perceived the garden beside my home as a safe haven. In a way, the collection represents our asylum.”
Conclusion
The beauty of dark green wall art lies in how it embodies nature and its lulling qualities. Here are all 18 dark green wall art artists we discussed in this article.


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