Last updated: · By Stanislav Arnautov · Berlin
Quick answer
Van Gogh's Starry Night for a bedroom: triptych (~$310) above the bed on deep navy. The Prussian blue sky merges with the wall; chrome yellow stars glow from the continuous blue field. The most immersive nocturnal bedroom installation. Centre at 165–170 cm from floor, 15–20 cm above headboard. Warm LED 2700K mandatory. DeckArts Berlin.
Vincent van Gogh (Zundert, 1853 – Auvers-sur-Oise, 1890) painted the Starry Night (La Nuit étoilée) in June 1889 from the east-facing barred window of his room at Saint-Paul-de-Mausole asylum, Saint-Rémy. Oil on canvas, 73.7 × 92.1 cm. MoMA New York since 1941. Van Gogh described it as "an exaggeration in style." DeckArts triptych from ~$310 on Canadian maple, shipping from Berlin.
Why the Starry Night Belongs in a Bedroom
The bedroom is the room with the closest contextual alignment with the Starry Night's subject: the night, the stars, the sleeping village below. The Starry Night depicts the world at rest. Above a bed, the ambient is precise: you are lying beneath the Starry Night's sky, in the sleeping village. Van Gogh painted it from a horizontal position (from his asylum bed when unable to stand at an easel) — the viewpoint of a person lying in a room watching the night sky through a window. Above a bed, the Starry Night returns to its original viewing condition.
Deep Navy Bedroom: The Most Immersive Installation
On deep navy (#1B2A4A), the Prussian blue sky and the navy wall create chromatic continuity: the painting's sky appears to extend into the wall. Against the continuous blue field, chrome yellow stars advance with maximum luminosity from the expanded nocturnal ground. The warm village and glowing church spire provide the only warm-dominant zone, advancing at maximum warmth from the cool surround. Under warm LED 2700K from a ceiling track spot (90–120 cm from wall, 30–40 degrees), the chrome yellow stars glow with specific optical self-luminosity. Dark oak bed frame, white linen, warm brass lamps at 2700K.
Forest Green Bedroom: Organic Botanical Night
Forest green (#2D5016) creates chromatic contrast rather than continuity: cool Prussian blue sky against organic warm green wall. The dark blue-green cypress in the triptych's left deck echoes the forest green wall, creating material correspondence between depicted botanical element and wall colour. For dark academia bedrooms: the most intellectually coherent installation. Dark teak bed frame, warm linen in cream or warm white, aged brass bedside lamps at 2700K.
White Bedroom: Scandinavian and Japandi
On warm white, the Starry Night reads at full compositional detail. The Prussian blue sky reads as the room's single cool chromatic event against the warm white ground. For Japandi: diptych (~$230) or single (~$140) is more proportionate than the triptych for the strict one-accent rule. For Scandinavian: triptych is appropriate as one cool statement on a warm white wall.
Sizing Above the Bed
| Bed size | Mattress width | DeckArts format | Width | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single | 90–100 cm | Diptych | ~45 cm | ~$230 |
| Double/Full | 135–140 cm | Triptych | ~70 cm | ~$310 |
| Queen | 150–160 cm | Triptych or 4-deck | ~70–95 cm | ~$310–$430 |
| King | 160–180 cm | 4-deck or 5-deck | ~95–120 cm | ~$430–$560 |
| Super King | 180–200 cm | 5-deck | ~120 cm | ~$560 |
Height: 165–170 cm from floor to art centre OR 15–20 cm above headboard top, whichever is higher. For tall headboards (110–130 cm), the headboard-gap rule takes priority.
2700K: Chrome Yellow Stars Need Warm LED
Chrome yellow (lead chromate, PbCrO₄) reflects the warm spectrum at maximum efficiency under 2700K warm LED — appearing self-luminous, floating from the Prussian blue sky. Under cool LED at 4000K+, the chrome yellow reads as flat synthetic yellow and the self-luminosity is completely lost. The Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam and MoMA New York both use approximately 2700–3000K for their Van Gogh collections for this specific reason. Ceiling track spot at 2700K, 90–120 cm from wall, 30–40 degree angle. Supplement with 2700K bedside lamps.
Starry Night vs Bedroom in Arles for a Bedroom
| Element | Starry Night | Bedroom in Arles |
|---|---|---|
| Subject | Nocturnal sky, sleeping village | The bedroom itself — furniture, rest |
| Van Gogh's intention | "An exaggeration" — ambivalent | "Absolute rest" — explicit |
| Best wall colour | Deep navy, forest green, warm white | Warm white, pale sage, warm cream |
| Format | Triptych (~$310) — panoramic | Single (~$140) — intimate |
| Best for | Dark-wall bedrooms, nocturnal drama | Light-wall bedrooms, warm rest |
Van Gogh — Starry Night Triptych (~$310)
View this piece →FAQ
Is the Starry Night good for a bedroom?
Yes — the Starry Night is specifically appropriate for a bedroom: nocturnal subject above nocturnal space. Above a bed on deep navy, the Prussian blue sky merges with the wall and chrome yellow stars glow from the continuous blue field. On warm white, it provides the room's single cool chromatic event for Scandinavian or Japandi. Triptych (~$310) for most beds; diptych (~$230) for smaller beds. 2700K mandatory. DeckArts Berlin.
What wall colour for Starry Night in a bedroom?
Deep navy: most immersive — sky merges with wall, stars glow. Forest green: organic botanical night, dark academia. Warm charcoal: contemporary, full compositional detail. Warm white: Scandinavian/Japandi cool accent. All require warm LED 2700K. DeckArts triptych from ~$310.
Starry Night or Bedroom in Arles for a bedroom?
Starry Night triptych (~$310) for dark-wall bedrooms (navy, forest green) — nocturnal drama, the sky above the sleeping world. Bedroom in Arles single (~$140) for light-wall bedrooms — warm rest, "absolute rest" as Van Gogh's explicit intention. Both are correct; the choice is nocturnal dramatic vs warm domestic rest. DeckArts both from ~$140.
Article Summary
Van Gogh painted Starry Night (June 1889, MoMA New York) from asylum window, horizontal viewpoint — original viewing condition matches above-bed placement. Deep navy bedroom: Prussian blue merges with wall, chrome yellow stars glow at maximum luminosity; dark oak + white linen + warm brass 2700K. Forest green: cool-on-organic, dark academia. White: Scandinavian/Japandi cool accent. Sizing: triptych (~70 cm) for Double/Queen; 4-deck (~95 cm) for King. Height: 165–170 cm from floor or 15–20 cm above headboard. 2700K mandatory (Van Gogh Museum + MoMA standard). vs Bedroom in Arles: nocturnal dramatic vs warm rest; dark walls vs light walls. DeckArts from ~$310 triptych. Canadian maple. UV archival 100+ years. Berlin. 30-day return.
About the Author
Stanislav Arnautov is the founder of DeckArts and a creative director from Ukraine based in Berlin.
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