Tech
Amazon Ember Artline TV Takes Aim at Samsung The Frame With Free Art and Alexa Plus
The Art TV category has become one of the television industry’s most competitive design battlegrounds, and Amazon is the latest major brand hoping to make a large black rectangle look less like it belongs in an airport lounge. Its new Ember Artline is Amazon’s first lifestyle TV, pairing a matte 4K QLED display, customizable frame colors, Fire TV, and access to more than 2,000 free works of art.
Samsung has largely defined this category since introducing The Frame in 2017, but the concept is no longer its private gallery. Hisense, TCL, and Skyworth have all introduced their own art focused TVs, while LG is preparing its Gallery TV line. Most follow the same broad formula: a matte screen, slim wall mounting, decorative bezels, and an art mode designed to make the television disappear when nobody is watching it.
Amazon is not reinventing the Art TV. It is, however, bringing the weight of the Fire TV platform and a substantial free art library to a category where Samsung has long held the advantage. That makes Ember Artline more than another lifestyle set with a tasteful frame; it is Amazon’s first serious attempt to hang a place in the premium living room on the wall.
Free Art, Fire TV, and a Matte QLED Display
Amazon’s Ember Artline TVs are designed to combine art display, personalization, and 4K streaming in a more accessible lifestyle TV package. The line is currently available in 55- and 65-inch screen sizes.
Picture Quality: Ember Artline models use 4K UHD QLED panels with matte, anti-glare screens designed to reduce reflections when displaying art or watching television. Supported HDR formats include HDR10, HDR10+, HLG, and Dolby Vision.
Sound: A built-in two-channel speaker system provides 20 watts of output on the 55-inch model and 24 watts on the 65-inch version, with Dolby Audio support. That should be adequate for casual viewing, but a soundbar or separate audio system remains the better choice for movies, sports, and music.
Art and Photos: Art Display is the centerpiece. Amazon includes access to more than 2,000 works of art at no additional subscription cost, and users can also display personal images through Amazon Photos.
Match the Room: This AI-powered feature lets users upload photos of their space and receive art recommendations based on the room’s colors, style, and existing décor. It is accessed through the Art & Photos hub in the Fire TV sidebar.
Frame Options: Each Ember Artline includes one magnetic, interchangeable frame. Buyers can choose from ten options, making it easy to alter the TV’s appearance without taking it off the wall.
Wood-Look Finishes: Ash, Teak, Walnut, and Black Oak.
Contemporary Colors: Midnight Blue, Fig, Matte White, Pale Gold, Silver, and Graphite.
Fire TV OS (2026): Ember Artline TVs ship with Amazon’s redesigned Fire TV experience, which features a cleaner interface, dedicated content categories, expanded app pinning, and personalized recommendations through Alexa+. The goal, naturally, is less time wandering through menus and more time actually watching something.
Gaming Support: Although art display is the focus, Ember Artline supports cloud gaming through Amazon Luna and Xbox Game Pass, so a separate console is not required. A compatible game controller is recommended, while some party games can use a smartphone as a controller. Keep expectations in check, however: the Artline uses a 60Hz panel and is not positioned as a high-performance gaming display with advanced features such as 120Hz playback or variable refresh rate support. Subscriptions and a capable internet connection may be required.
Instant On: Amazon’s OmniSense technology uses built-in sensors to wake the display when someone enters the room, either showing selected artwork or making the TV ready to use. When the room is empty, the display turns off to conserve energy.
Alexa+: Alexa+ adds hands-free control, personalized content recommendations, photo browsing, smart-home management, and faster search. It is included with a Prime membership on compatible devices and is also available to non-Prime customers through the Alexa+ Standard plan for $19.99 per month. Alexa+ can also be accessed through compatible Alexa devices, Alexa.com, and the Alexa app.
Amazon Ember Artline TVs
| Amazon TV Model Number | Ember Artline |
| Product Type | 4K UHD QLED Smart TV |
| Price (List Price) | 55-inch: $899 65-inch: $1,099 |
| OS version | Fire OS 8 |
| Processor (SoC) | AML T963D4Z |
| CPU | 4x CA55 @ 1.9 GHz |
| Application BinaryInterface (ABI) | 32-bit |
| GPU | Mali-G57 MC1 |
| Memory (RAM) | 2.5 GB |
| Mic | Bottom 2×2 Mic Array |
| Connectors / Ports | 4 x HDMI (1 HDMI 2.1 with eARC, 3 HDMI 2.0 1 x USB 3.0 1 x RF Input 1 x SPDIF Digital Audio Output Optical 1 x Audio Output Headphone 1 x 3.5mm mini jack IR blaster output |
| Onboard Controls | One button for Channel Up/Down, Volume Up/Down, and Power |
| Audio System | 55″ – 10W+10W 65″ – 12W+12W |
| HDR Support | HDR10, HDR10+, HLG, dolby Vision |
| Resolution and Refresh Rate | 4k UHD (3840 x 2160) @ 60 Hz |
| Audio codecs (input formats) | AAC Up to 48kHz 2 channels
MP3. Up to 48kHz, 2 channels in DSP (16-bit and 24-bit) and software (16-bit) PCM/Wave. Up to 96kHz, 6 channels, 16-bit and 24-bit Opus. Up to 8 channels, 48 kHz |
| Dolby Audio. | – Support for AC3 (Dolby Digital) and EAC3 (Dolby Digital Plus) pass through (omx.google.raw.dec) decoder
– Dolby passthrough support from Audio Track – AV Sync handling for Dolby passthrough – Mixing system sound with Dolby Stream in pass-through mode – Support device switching from Dolby passthrough to non-passthrough playback |
| Video Codecs | HEVC VP9 AV`1 |
| DRM (Digital Rights Management) | Yes |
| Bluetooth | Ver 5.4 |
| Wifi | 802.11ax 1T1R; WiFi 6, support 2.4GHz&5GHz; Chip MT7902B |
| Ethernet | 10/100 Mbps |
| Storage | 16 GB |
| Miracast(display mirroring with Fire tablet) | Yes |
| Far-field Alexa control | Hands-free voice control is supported only through a linked Echo device Near-field Alexa control |
| Mic button on Remote | Supported |
| Dimensions (WHD – with frame) | 55-inch model: 49.1” x 28.7” x 1.8” 65-inch model: 57.0” x 33.2” x 1.55” |
| Weight (with frame) | 55-inch model: 42.5 lbs 65-inch model: 57.1 lbs |
The Bottom Line
Amazon’s Ember Artline is not likely to topple Samsung’s The Frame or LG’s Gallery TV on picture performance alone. With only two screen sizes, a 60Hz QLED panel, and no premium gaming features, Amazon is taking a measured first swing at the Art TV category rather than arriving with a wrecking ball.
What makes Ember Artline different is the value proposition. Buyers get more than 2,000 artworks at no added subscription cost, a magnetic frame in the box, ten frame-style options, and Match the Room, which uses AI to suggest artwork that suits the colors and décor of a specific space. That is a smarter approach than simply hanging a matte TV on the wall and calling it culture.
The Ember Artline makes the most sense for Prime members and existing Fire TV or Alexa households who want an attractive, easy-to-use TV that does not demand another monthly fee just to look presentable between episodes. It is also a credible option for shoppers who prioritize décor, personalization, and Amazon’s ecosystem over reference-level black levels, serious gaming performance, or a wider selection of screen sizes.
Samsung still has the deeper Art TV pedigree, while LG and other rivals offer more premium alternatives. But Amazon’s retail reach, included art catalog, and ecosystem integration give Ember Artline a clearer purpose than another me-too lifestyle set. If the line expands beyond 55 and 65 inches, it could become a much more serious threat.
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