Where structural depth meets artistic restraint. This artwork presents the posterior muscular system through a deliberately abstract interpretation. The musculature of the back body — from the epicranial and trapezius to the gluteus maximus, hamstrings, and gastrocnemius — is anatomically positioned and indexed, yet embedded within a simplified, sculptural silhouette.
From a distance, the piece reads as contemporary wall art — calm, grounded, and compositionally balanced. Up close, clinical precision becomes visible: 25 posterior structures carefully identified and arranged in a clean vertical index. The experience is layered. Form first. Detail second. Unlike traditional anatomical posters that prioritise density and instruction, this piece inverts the hierarchy. The silhouette leads. The information supports. The posterior chain becomes integrated rather than diagrammed — present without dominating the room.
The posterior muscular system represents the body’s structural backbone: trapezius, latissimus dorsi, thoraco-lumbar fascia, gluteals, hamstrings, and calf complex — the tissues responsible for extension, propulsion, load transfer, and postural endurance. Here, those structures are respected clinically while interpreted visually, allowing educational substance without visual heaviness.
This is not purely a textbook chart, nor purely decorative artwork. It occupies the space between. For clinics that value clarity, design, and subtle anatomical presence, the Abstract Posterior Muscular System offers structural depth — without visual noise.
View this artwork here on YouTube.
Displayed alongside the Abstract Anterior Muscular System, the two works create a complete anterior–posterior dialogue. The mirrored silhouettes and restrained colour palette align seamlessly, forming a balanced visual composition that feels intentional rather than decorative. Together, they offer full muscular context — front and back — while maintaining the same calm, design-led aesthetic.
Free customisation with your clinic’s name.
For this chart we offer to add your clinic’s name (or website address) for free! The name will go instead of the current sub-headline on the artwork; view an illustration of this in the image gallery.
Make it part of your clinic!
⬇ Order here.