Novak Djokovic – Novak Djokovic Print – Tennis Print – Wimbledon Poster – ATP Print – Sport Bedroom Poster

from €34.00
Sizes:

Elastic sovereign: Novak Djokovic and the geometry of dominance.

Wimbledon, 2013. On a noon so bright it seemed to bleach the very sound from Centre Court, Novak Djokovic skidded across the worn grass like a circus acrobat performing calculus. Arms splayed, string-bed grazing the turf, he threaded a backhand while looking, improbably, at the sky. The photograph—now an arresting Wimbledon print— crystallised everything that has followed: balance in chaos, elegance wrestled from extremity, victory coaxed from positions other mortals file under “lost cause.”

Twenty-four Grand Slam titles later, the Serb’s résumé reads like a customs ledger of conquest: Melbourne embraced him a record ten times; Paris, once impregnable to outsiders, finally capitulated in 2016 and thrice more thereafter; New York’s roar became familiar; London’s lawns, once Federer’s fief, were annexed with clinical patience. Between those milestones came seven season-ending Masters, forty shimmering Masters 1000 trophies, and a tally of weeks at world No. 1 so vast—428—that statisticians resorted to parentheses.

The anecdotes are as rich as the silverware:

  • The day in Melbourne he ordered ball-kids to fetch gluten-free bread so he could toast his new diet mid-press conference, then reeled off another title.

  • Belgrade, December 2010: after sealing Serbia’s first Davis Cup, he danced kolo with the grounds crew until dawn, racket still taped to his palm.

  • Madrid’s altitude, 2011—he defused Nadal in straight sets, then apologised for “stealing the Spanish oxygen.”

  • At Rome 2022, he spotted a young fan sobbing over a denied autograph, re-emerged from the locker room with his match shirt, and slipped it over the boy’s shoulders like ceremonial armour.

Through it all, the elastic geometry persisted: lungs of an alpinist, splits worthy of Béjart’s ballet, a return of serve that feels telepathic. Rivals speak of a “rolling wall”—push it back and it returns taller, smoother, inevitable. Even his brief moments of rebellion—racket shards glinting on concrete—serve as punctuation, reminding us that perfection is forged, not inherited.

Frame that defiant sprawl at Wimbledon and you possess more than a picture; you hold a theorem on motion, a silent lecture on possibility. Our limited-edition Novak Djokovic print—premium giclée on museum-grade cotton—anchors any room with its tensile poise. Pair it with a companion tennis poster from his Melbourne trilogy, or let it stand alone as statement tennis wall art. Own the image, own the myth: Djokovic, gravity’s reluctant guest, forever parallel to the grass.

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➤ ABOUT THE PRINT

Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.

  • Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish

  • Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)

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➤ HOW TO ORDER

Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.

Sizes:

  • A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)

  • A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)

  • A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)

---------------------------------------------------

➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED

---------------------------------------------------

➤ ADDITIONAL

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.

Elastic sovereign: Novak Djokovic and the geometry of dominance.

Wimbledon, 2013. On a noon so bright it seemed to bleach the very sound from Centre Court, Novak Djokovic skidded across the worn grass like a circus acrobat performing calculus. Arms splayed, string-bed grazing the turf, he threaded a backhand while looking, improbably, at the sky. The photograph—now an arresting Wimbledon print— crystallised everything that has followed: balance in chaos, elegance wrestled from extremity, victory coaxed from positions other mortals file under “lost cause.”

Twenty-four Grand Slam titles later, the Serb’s résumé reads like a customs ledger of conquest: Melbourne embraced him a record ten times; Paris, once impregnable to outsiders, finally capitulated in 2016 and thrice more thereafter; New York’s roar became familiar; London’s lawns, once Federer’s fief, were annexed with clinical patience. Between those milestones came seven season-ending Masters, forty shimmering Masters 1000 trophies, and a tally of weeks at world No. 1 so vast—428—that statisticians resorted to parentheses.

The anecdotes are as rich as the silverware:

  • The day in Melbourne he ordered ball-kids to fetch gluten-free bread so he could toast his new diet mid-press conference, then reeled off another title.

  • Belgrade, December 2010: after sealing Serbia’s first Davis Cup, he danced kolo with the grounds crew until dawn, racket still taped to his palm.

  • Madrid’s altitude, 2011—he defused Nadal in straight sets, then apologised for “stealing the Spanish oxygen.”

  • At Rome 2022, he spotted a young fan sobbing over a denied autograph, re-emerged from the locker room with his match shirt, and slipped it over the boy’s shoulders like ceremonial armour.

Through it all, the elastic geometry persisted: lungs of an alpinist, splits worthy of Béjart’s ballet, a return of serve that feels telepathic. Rivals speak of a “rolling wall”—push it back and it returns taller, smoother, inevitable. Even his brief moments of rebellion—racket shards glinting on concrete—serve as punctuation, reminding us that perfection is forged, not inherited.

Frame that defiant sprawl at Wimbledon and you possess more than a picture; you hold a theorem on motion, a silent lecture on possibility. Our limited-edition Novak Djokovic print—premium giclée on museum-grade cotton—anchors any room with its tensile poise. Pair it with a companion tennis poster from his Melbourne trilogy, or let it stand alone as statement tennis wall art. Own the image, own the myth: Djokovic, gravity’s reluctant guest, forever parallel to the grass.

---------------------------------------------------

➤ ABOUT THE PRINT

Each artwork is professionally printed on gallery quality matte paper which perfectly compliments the designs using only archival inks. The high print quality ensure that your wall print will last a long time while maintaining its original color.

  • Premium Matte Paper: 200 gsm, premium quality, matte finish

  • Shipped in a stiff cardboard tube (100% recyclable, 90% recycled)

---------------------------------------------------

➤ HOW TO ORDER

Simply purchase the listing in your desired size.

Sizes:

  • A3 (297 X 420 mm / 11.7 X 16.5 in)

  • A2 (420 x 594 mm / 16.5 x 23.4 in)

  • A1 (594 x 841 mm / 23.4 x 33.1 in)

---------------------------------------------------

➤ PLEASE NOTE: FRAME IS NOT INCLUDED

---------------------------------------------------

➤ ADDITIONAL

If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us.