OASIS INSPIRED WALL ART – NOEL GALLAGHER

£74.99 Sale Save

Item is in stock Only 0 left in stock Item is out of stock Item is unavailable

Adding to Cart Added to Cart
BUY TWO & GET A THIRD FREE - ADD 3 TO THE CART AND GET THE CHEAPEST FREE. NO CODE REQUIRED.

Spruce up your wall with this unique Oasis wall art featuring the band's ringleader and songwriter supreme Noel Gallagher.

This legendary art print immortalises one of the most iconic moments of the 90s: Noel Gallagher playing his Union Jack Epiphone guitar at Maine Road stadium. 

Printed on high quality 250gsm smooth art paper for the premium long lasting finish, intended to make your wall pop! 

Want your Tupac print framed?

Sure, a regular old Tupac poster is alright, but a framed print is the way to go if you fancy pimping out your bedroom, lounge or hallway. 

Available frame sizes: 

Our iconic illustrations are currently available framed in sizes A4, A3, A2 or A1.

Our minimal wall art frames are 20mm depth with a smooth black wooden effect. Finished with an acrylic perspex window and ready to hang straight on your wall. 

Can't choose between Noel and Liam? Check out our custom Maine Road Print Set...


A Brief History of Noel Gallagher

As the middle child of the Gallagher clan (don’t forget big bro Paul), Noel’s time as a kid wasn’t exactly the rosiest. Between weekly outings to Maine Road and the occasional petty theft, he found sanctuary in getting high and writing scrappy songs on a guitar that his old man had left behind. Fun fact: he learnt to play right-handed despite being a natural lefty.

Noel’s first real encounter with the rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle came a few years later after blagging his way on tour with Mancunian band Inspiral Carpets, working as a roadie. The story goes that he got paid £3 per day, plus a Pot Noodle. Not bad. 

Once back on English soil, Noel was asked to join Liam's new group – then known as The Rain – as chief songwriter. He quickly cemented himself as ringleader and creative force, ruthless in pursuit of the music he wanted to make. It wasn’t long before the band changed their name, signed with Creation Records and began a meteoric rise to stardom over the course of two short years.

Anyway, it’s clear that Oasis thrived on the tension between Noel and Liam. The poet and the town-crier. Fights were frequent and the band seemed to break up and get back together time after time. After a slot at Stafford’s V Festival in 2009, Noel decided enough was enough and ended the band for good.

These days, both brothers are doing pretty well for themselves. Whereas Liam remains hellbent on bringing the no-frills Oasis shtick to a new generation, Noel and his High Flying Birds seem more interested in pushing their sound in a new direction, especially in the studio. The jury is still out on those French interludes, mind you.

Selected cuts...

 

This content type will accept rich text to help with adding styles and links to additional pages or content. Use this to add supplementary information to help your buyers.

You can use product metafields to assign content to this tab that is unique to an individual product. Use tabs to highlight unique features, sizing information, or other sales information.

Buy it with