Design Cubism images in your browser with Morphic's Cubism AI image generator. Create a faceted guitarist from three angles or an analytic still life in ochres, lock the fractured-plane geometry with Style Transfer, then animate any still with Image to Video.

Cubism subjects you can paint

Cubism scenes you can compose

Analytic still life of wine bottle and newspaper

An analytic-Cubism still life on a cafe table, wine bottle and newspaper broken into faceted planes, glass and cup overlapping in stacked diamonds, muted ochre palette.

Edit prompt
Analytic still life of wine bottle and newspaper

Synthetic-Cubist collage of cafe objects

A synthetic-Cubist composition with pasted-paper textures, wood-grain rectangle, fragment of sheet music, glass and pipe in flat planes, bright limited palette.

Edit prompt
Synthetic-Cubist collage of cafe objects

Cubist city of tilted rooftops

A Cubist cityscape of tilted faceted rooftops and a single church tower, planes of pale ochre and dust green stacked across the canvas, narrow charcoal contour lines.

Edit prompt
Cubist city of tilted rooftops

Cubist village under a stacked sky

A Cubist village of green-brown facets under a stacked sky of grey-blue rectangles, single road slicing diagonally across the canvas, charcoal contour around every plane.

Edit prompt
Cubist village under a stacked sky

Make Cubism in three steps

  1. 01

    Describe your Cubism

    Describe the Cubism you want, in plain words.

  2. 02

    Generate the image

    Morphic generates a clean, ready-to-publish image on your canvas in seconds.

  3. 03

    Refine your Cubism

    Tweak the prompt, regenerate variations, then download or share the frame.

Related workflows

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FAQs

Where can I make Cubism images with AI?
You can create Cubism images directly in your browser on Morphic. Open the Image tool, describe the subject and mode with the geometry and palette spelled out, and Morphic produces the artwork. No installs and no specialist software needed.
What Cubism styles can I generate?
Analytic-Cubism portraits and still lifes with muted ochres and stacked facets, synthetic-Cubism collage compositions with pasted-paper textures and bright limited palettes, Cubist cityscapes of tilted rooftops, and double portraits fused into a single geometric mask. Name the mode upfront so Morphic picks the right palette.
How do I keep Cubism subjects consistent across multiple images?
Use the Character Lineup workflow to lock in each figure's signature features (instrument, bowler hat, mirror, palette) before generating, then reference those character cards in every prompt. Morphic preserves the design across still life, portrait, and cityscape scenes so a series reads as one body of work.
How do I prompt for the fractured-plane geometry?
Name the geometry directly. Use phrases like "head and instrument broken into overlapping facets", "stacked diamond planes", "stepped slabs", "seen from front, profile, and three-quarter at once", "charcoal contour around every plane". The named geometry tells Morphic to splinter the form instead of smoothing it.
Can I turn my Cubism image into a video?
Yes. Open the Image to Video tool, upload the still, and describe the motion you want (planes rotating into one another, a slow camera around a guitarist, light sliding across stacked rooftops). Morphic animates from the source so the video preserves the original geometry and palette.
Do I need art-history vocabulary to prompt Cubism images?
No. Plain words for subject, geometry, and palette are enough. If you do know terms like analytic Cubism, synthetic Cubism, papier collé, or simultaneity, citing them sharpens the result; if not, describing what you see in your head still gets you a strong Cubism image.