PURE VOLUME AND SPACE
— HOME COPENHAGEN
Home
An attic apartment by David Thulstrup inspired by his interiors of Noma restaurant exudes humanity and humility with architectural clarity and grace. Feeling is central to the practice of the founder and creative director of Studio David Thulstrip. He strikes a balance between aesthetics and atmosphere, creating rooms that are beautiful but also approachable. Welcoming even…
“I LIKE TO THINK THERE’S A REALLY HUMAN SCALE IN MY PROJECTS. PEOPLE HAVE A SENSE OF WELL-BEING, OF COMFORT, AND THEY MAY NOT BE ABLE TO PINPOINT WHY BUT IT BOILS DOWN TO VOLUME, MATERIALITY, TEXTURE AND CREATING A REAL SENSE OF SPACE.”
David Thulstrup
The story featuring the transformation of this Copenhagen apartment is in Ark Journal VOL III.
WORDS NATALIA RACHLIN
PHOTOGRAPHY WICHMANN + BENDTSEN
STYLING HELLE WALSTED
CASE STUDY
— MONUMENTAL MONOCHROME
The enduring aesthetic of Danish furniture has always been entirely in step with other contemporary design practices, ceramics, glass, textiles, and particularly architecture.
LANDON METZ
Space is important to Landon Metz. In his art, pools of colour float across canvas leaving vast areas of unprimed fabric. In his studio the same sense of space – and the importance of the negative – is evident in the blanks between sparsely scattered furniture and plants.
CASE STUDY
— PERIOD PIECES
In the unique surroundings of the house created by Danish sculptor Rikard Axel Poulsen (1887-1972) furniture, lighting and homewares by contemporary designers exhibit their serene poise, the avant-garde flanked by the archaic to create layers of history.
PURE VOLUME AND SPACE
— HOME COPENHAGEN
home
An attic apartment by David Thulstrup inspired by his interiors of Noma restaurant exudes humanity and humility with architectural clarity and grace. Feeling is central to the practice of the founder and creative director of Studio David Thulstrip. He strikes a balance between aesthetics and atmosphere, creating rooms that are beautiful but also approachable. Welcoming even…
“I LIKE TO THINK THERE’S A REALLY HUMAN SCALE IN MY PROJECTS. PEOPLE HAVE A SENSE OF WELL-BEING, OF COMFORT, AND THEY MAY NOT BE ABLE TO PINPOINT WHY BUT IT BOILS DOWN TO VOLUME, MATERIALITY, TEXTURE AND CREATING A REAL SENSE OF SPACE.”
David Thulstrup
The story featuring the transformation of this Copenhagen apartment is in Ark Journal VOL III.