Article: Hokusai Prints: How to Style The Great Wave, Mount Fuji and Japanese Wall Art

Hokusai Prints: How to Style The Great Wave, Mount Fuji and Japanese Wall Art
Hokusai prints are a strong choice when you want wall art that feels calm, graphic and instantly recognisable without making the room look overworked. The crisp blues of The Great Wave, the softer Mount Fuji landscapes and the quieter nature studies all bring a different mood, so the best choice depends on the room, the wall size and how much visual energy you want.
If you are shopping for classic Japanese art, start with the Hokusai prints collection. Use this guide to narrow down the subject, format and colour palette before you choose the exact piece.

Why Hokusai prints still work in modern homes
Katsushika Hokusai is best known for Japanese woodblock prints, especially wave and Mount Fuji scenes. For interiors, the appeal is practical as well as artistic: the compositions are clear from a distance, the colour palettes are easy to build around, and the subjects sit comfortably in both traditional and modern rooms.
That makes Hokusai wall art especially useful when you want a piece with character but do not want the room to feel loud. A blue wave print can anchor a living room or study, while a mountain, tiger or floral print can bring a quieter Japanese-art influence into a bedroom, hallway or reading corner.
Choosing the right Hokusai print for your room
For a main feature wall, choose one of the more recognisable wave compositions. A Big Wave off Kanagawa by Hokusai is the obvious route if you want the artwork to become the centre of the room. It works particularly well with white walls, navy accents, oak furniture, black frames and simple neutral upholstery.
If the room already has a lot of pattern or colour, a calmer landscape is usually easier to live with. Mount Fuji by Hokusai keeps the Japanese-art feel but gives the wall a softer pace. It is a good fit for bedrooms, home offices and rooms where you want the artwork to feel collected rather than dramatic.

The Great Wave, Mount Fuji and blue wall art palettes
The Great Wave is powerful because it gives you movement, contrast and colour in one image. To make it feel grown-up rather than themed, repeat the blue in small doses: a cushion, vase, book spine, rug detail or painted side table is enough. Keep the surrounding wall simple so the artwork can carry the room.
Mount Fuji prints create a different effect. They suit warmer neutrals, pale grey, muted green and natural wood. If you like Japanese wall art but prefer an understated room, this is often the better starting point than the wave.
For a broader choice of scenic pieces, the landscape framed prints collection can help you compare Hokusai with other landscape-led artwork before settling on the right mood.
Framed print, canvas or poster: which format fits best?
A framed print is the neatest choice for a polished room. It gives Hokusai's detailed line work a clean edge and pairs well with other classic artist prints. If you are styling a hallway, dining room, study or bedroom, browse Hokusai framed prints or the wider framed prints collection.
Canvas works better when you want a bolder, softer-edged feature. It can suit living rooms, games rooms and larger open spaces where glass and frame detail may feel too formal. For wider walls, a split-panel option such as The Great Wave off Kanagawa split canvas print can fill the space more confidently than a single small piece.

If you want to compare formats before choosing, the canvas prints and posters collection is useful for seeing how a more relaxed print style differs from framed wall art.
How to pair Hokusai with Monet, Van Gogh, Klimt and other artist prints
Hokusai pairs well with classic artist prints because the work has a strong sense of line, movement and colour. For a calm gallery wall, mix one Hokusai print with softer impressionist pieces from the Monet framed prints collection. Monet helps keep the room light and painterly.
For a more expressive wall, pair Hokusai's blues with the movement and night-sky colour of Van Gogh framed prints. If you want something richer and warmer, Klimt prints can add gold, pattern and contrast. For still life and landscape balance, Cezanne prints are another easy companion.
The trick is to choose one anchor piece first. If The Great Wave is the hero, keep the rest of the wall quieter. If Mount Fuji is the anchor, you can bring in more colour through neighbouring prints.
Room ideas for bedrooms, studies, hallways and living rooms
In a living room, let a wave print sit above a sofa, sideboard or reading chair where it has enough space around it. Keep nearby frames aligned and avoid crowding the wall with too many small pieces.
In a bedroom, choose calmer Hokusai subjects such as Mount Fuji, florals or animal studies. These give the room detail without the force of a full wave scene. Soft blue, cream, sage and natural wood all work well around this kind of artwork.

In a hallway, a framed Hokusai print can add character to a narrow space without needing a full gallery wall. Florals and smaller nature-led pieces are especially useful here because they reward closer viewing as people pass through.

For a study or office, choose the print based on the room's rhythm. The Great Wave brings energy; Mount Fuji feels steadier; botanical and animal prints are quieter and more detailed. Each route gives the space a different kind of focus.
Shop Hokusai prints and related Japanese wall art
If you already know you want Hokusai, browse the full Hokusai prints collection first. It is the best place to compare wave prints, Mount Fuji artwork, framed options, canvas formats and quieter nature studies in one place.
If you are still comparing the wider look, explore Japanese framed prints, framed wall art and canvas prints and posters. Hokusai is a strong starting point, but the right final choice should suit the room as much as the artwork itself.












