Decorating with tennis posters: from court to wall
The Belle Epoque and Art Deco look of tennis, brought home. Court-green and ochre palettes, oak frames, and the rooms where a court poster belongs.
Tennis and the poster: a lasting marriage, and our tennis posters are the proof. Roland-Garros has commissioned an official poster every year since 1980, each signed by a different artist (Eduardo Arroyo in 1981, Hans Hartung in 1983, Antoni Tàpies in 1991, Joan Miró posthumously in 1991 too). Wimbledon, more discreet, left it to the advertising agencies. The US Open uses photographs. The Italian Open at the Foro Italico in Rome kept the Art Deco aesthetic the longest.
Our selection: vintage Grand Slams, a few iconic ATP pieces, and posters reworked in the Italian Art Deco vein (think Rome 1935). Wood framing for that trophy feel.
Discover also: Tennis & Sport, Sports and Golf. Collection favourites: Poster Wimbledon Tennis Art Deco and Poster Tennis Madrid Clay Court Art Deco.

















The Belle Epoque and Art Deco look of tennis, brought home. Court-green and ochre palettes, oak frames, and the rooms where a court poster belongs.

Since 1980, each edition of the tournament has had its own poster, signed by a different artist. An overview of a public commission that brought contemporary art and clay courts into dialogue.

Before sports photography, illustration ruled the sporting poster. An aesthetic of gesture and speed that still works in any interior.