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EntertainmentLGLifestyleTech

LG debuts Wallpaper, G6 and Gallery TVs for art-first homes

LG’s new Art TV lineup – featuring the OLED evo AI W6 Wallpaper TV, OLED evo AI G6 and Gallery TV – is built to blend into your decor and double as a digital art wall.

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Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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May 19, 2026, 11:58 AM EDT
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LG Art TV lineup displayed in a modern gallery-style showroom, featuring three wall-mounted OLED televisions showcasing artwork and framed display designs, including the LG OLED evo AI G6, W6 Wallpaper Design, and LG Gallery TV AI LX7 models.
Image: LG Electronics
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LG is turning the living room wall into something that looks a lot less like a TV and a lot more like a curated gallery. The company has just rolled out a trio of “Art TVs” – the OLED evo AI W6 Wallpaper TV, the OLED evo AI G6, and the new Gallery TV – all built to disappear into your decor until it is time for a movie night or an art showcase. Instead of asking you to design your space around a big black rectangle, LG is clearly trying to flip the script: the TV is now the frame, the canvas, and the light, and your wall is the exhibition.

At the top of the lineup is the OLED evo AI W6, better known as the Wallpaper TV, and the nickname is not marketing fluff. This thing is roughly 9 to 10 millimeters thin, including the panel and housing, which means when it is mounted flush on the wall, it genuinely looks like a sheet of glass or a framed print rather than a conventional TV. LG even routes connectivity through a separate Zero Connect box that sends a visually lossless 4K signal wirelessly to the display, so you are not running a bundle of HDMI cables up the wall and ruining the illusion. The design has already grabbed iF Design and Red Dot awards, which tells you this is more than a spec bump – it is a statement piece aimed at people who care as much about interiors as they do about image quality.

The Wallpaper TV is also where LG flexes its latest display tech. It is powered by the α11 AI Processor Gen3, the company’s current flagship chip, and uses what LG calls Hyper Radiant Color Tech, essentially a new generation of OLED processing that pushes brightness up to around 3.9 times that of conventional OLED while trying to keep color accuracy and contrast in check. You still get the classic OLED perks – Perfect Black and Perfect Color, meaning each pixel can switch completely off for true blacks while fine color gradients stay intact – but now with more punch in bright scenes and improved HDR performance. The panel is also certified for a “Reflection Free Premium” experience, which is LG’s way of saying it has tuned coatings and panel structure to cut glare so that art or video looks consistent in bright rooms. That matters when you are trying to mimic a gallery wall instead of a conventional TV setup with blackout curtains.

Step down from the Wallpaper model and you get the OLED evo AI G6, which plays a slightly different design angle. Instead of trying to vanish into the wall entirely, the G6 uses what LG calls a Gallery design: the chassis is engineered to sit flush against the wall with a very slim gap, so the TV reads as a clean, integrated panel rather than a floating slab of electronics. For anyone who has wrestled with messy wall mounts and crooked installs, that flush-fit design is a subtle but meaningful quality-of-life upgrade, especially in spaces where you want a minimalist look without going all in on the wallpaper approach. Under the hood, though, it is using the same playbook: Hyper Radiant Color Tech, the α11 AI Processor 4K Gen3, and Reflection Free certification to push brightness and color while keeping reflections in check. You are essentially getting flagship OLED visuals in a slightly more conventional but still design-focused package that may make more sense for a lot of living rooms and media spaces.

The third piece of the puzzle, the new Gallery TV, is where LG leans hardest into the “art TV” concept. Instead of OLED, LG uses a specialized panel tuned with input from museum curators to prioritize the way art looks on the screen: think controlled brightness, subtle texture, and a matte-style finish engineered to handle ambient light more like a framed print than a glossy TV. The hardware is designed to resemble a framed artwork, with attachable frames that click around the panel so you can treat the TV like a decorative object, not just a display. LG is clearly aiming directly at Samsung’s Frame series here, but with its own content strategy and ecosystem layered on top. For people who care about how the bezel looks as much as what is on screen, the Gallery TV is the one that tries to feel truly at home among real canvas pieces and photo prints.

All three of these models are tied together by one idea: a TV that is not “off” when it is not playing shows. That is where LG Gallery+ comes in, the company’s subscription-based art and visual content service that turns these sets into connected digital canvases. Out of the box, the 2026 Art TV lineup ships with a complimentary three-month Gallery+ subscription in select markets, including the US, giving owners access to more than 5,000 curated artworks from museums, cultural institutions, and partner platforms. LG has also inked a partnership with Sedition, a digital art platform that specializes in contemporary video and media art, which means Gallery+ now includes a growing catalog of motion pieces and exclusive works that go beyond static images. For daily use, that translates to your TV cycling through curated collections, ambient scenes, and digital installations instead of just an idle logo or screensaver.

One of the more quietly powerful features of Gallery+ is that it is not locked to just big-name art. You can upload your own photographs or personal visuals, turning the TV into a rotating family photo wall or portfolio screen when guests are over. LG is also sprinkling in AI here, letting users generate visuals using built-in tools and then pair them with music or ambient soundscapes, effectively turning the TV into a very large, very bright generative art display. For a lot of people, that is more interesting in practice than yet another hyper-real demo clip because it means the TV can reflect your taste instead of just showcasing LG’s. It does also hint at LG’s long-term plan: the hardware is meant to be the gateway to an ongoing content and subscription relationship, not just a one-time purchase.

From a practical standpoint, LG is rolling these art-focused sets out globally in phases through 2026, with availability and sizes varying by region. The US is one of the markets getting the complimentary Gallery+ trial, alongside major European countries, the UK, South Korea, and Australia, which reinforces the idea that LG sees art-as-a-service as a pillar of its premium TV strategy. On the technical side, the W6 and G6 in particular are not just pretty faces; they also hit gamer-friendly specs like 4K at up to 165Hz, variable refresh rate, and support for NVIDIA G‑SYNC Compatible and AMD FreeSync Premium, so they can shift from gallery mode to high-end gaming monitor when you fire up a console or PC. That dual personality – lifestyle object when idle, performance display when active – is a big part of why LG can justify positioning these as halo products.

For anyone comparing the three, the Wallpaper TV is the one you choose if you want the TV to virtually disappear into the wall and you are willing to manage a more involved installation with the separate wireless box. The OLED evo G6 gives you nearly the same picture and processing in a form factor that feels a bit more traditional and easier to live with, while still hugging the wall tightly enough to blend into a modern living room. The Gallery TV is the lifestyle play – less about pure OLED black levels and more about the framed-object aesthetic and gallery-style presentation, especially if you intend to use art or ambient visuals as often as you watch films. In each case, LG is betting that people are ready to treat the most dominant screen in the home as part of the interior story, not an intrusion on it.


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