Morten Lasskogen
Denmark-based artist, Morten Lasskogen a.k.a Moteh on Instagram has people sold with his unique artwork that just pulls you in and fascinates
Danish designer, Cecilie Manz creates furniture, glass, lamps and related products, mainly for the home. In addition to her work with industrial products, her experimental prototypes and more sculptural one-offs make up an important part of her work and approach:
“I view all my works as fragments of one big, ongoing story where the projects are often linked or related in terms of their idea, materials and aesthetics, across time and function. Some objects remain experiments or sculpted ideas, others are made more concrete and turn into functional tools.
The task or project itself often holds the key to inspiration; ideas don’t come from waiting but from leg-work, drafting and trials. My work goes from the inside out, and a project has to possess a sound, strong and relevant idea or functional justification before I address the actual physical design. My work has always revolved around simplicity, the process of working toward a pure, aesthetic object.”
“Danish-born, London-based photographer Mads Perch is renowned for continually pushing his creative and technical limits, often using smoke, projections and unorthodox creative elements which he then feeds back into his commissioned projects giving his work a unique style and in the process beautifully blurring the lines between fine art and commercial photography.” - @trendland
Featured below is a selection of shots and a short film from his recent editorial for Nataal (@nataalmedia) a global media brand celebrating contemporary African fashion, music, arts and society.
Kim Høltermand is a freelance architectural and landscape photographer from Denmark, recently dropped a series of hypnotising urban photography made in the fog after rain
Young visual artist Lea Brisell creates creepy and fun anthropomorphic images that make you feel weird
Danish-German artist duo Anna Borgman and Candy Lenk created a series of installations exploring “the relationship between sculpture and place”.
"Titled ‘Wurf’ (‘Throw’), the large-scale installation features a piece made of paper maché and wood that mimics a heavy stone. Displayed in a courtyard in Berlin-Prenzlauer Berg, ‘Wurf I’ is installed in a delicate green glasshouse. ‘Wurf II’ features the stone imitation hanging from the roof of a monastery church near Leipzig."
The Copenhagen-based artist øjeRum weaves together antique portraits and classic sculptures with fantastical settings, imbuing each human subject with a layer of depth. Added elements of natural wonder such as starry skies, spooky woods, and breath-taking valleys expand each collage into strategic patterns.
Phygital - a new word in describing real world materia crawling into the digital existence and vice versa. This is the best way to describe what Anny Wang and Tim Söderström do on a daily basis by creating an unexpected digital experiences through materiality and technology taken from the real world. "For example, one series, Treasures amalgamates objects which you know are created on screen, but each element uses an analogue perspective. Marble and stone materials, or even a giant wobbly creature-like ball, appear so realistically that initially you think the image is a highly stylised still life shoot."
Conceptual photography by Kim Høltermand
Shipping containers are stacked on a floating platform to create these buoyant student halls of residence designed by Bjarke Ingels' firm for Copenhagen harbour (+ slideshow).
The project named Urban Rigger aims to provide low-cost housing for students in the centre of the Copenhagen, docked in the harbour.
BIG's scheme comprises nine shipping containers stacked and arranged on a floating base, to create 15 studio residences over two levels.
Scandinavian illustrator Sarah Egbert Eiersholtrah from Copenhagen shows latest commercial artworks on personal website. More over she started to work as tattoo artist doing line body-works available for preview on her Instagram
Tenka Gammelgaard is a danish artist who studied theatre scenography at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts. As an artist she works on many decoration projects in Denmark and abroad. In addition to working as a visual artist she has created everything from porcelain for Royal Copenhagen to Irma carry bags. She is permanently represented in galleries in Tokyo, Singapore and Oslo. Tenka lives in and has a studio in the heart of Copenhagen. Its decoration drives our attention so please enjoy photos of it below
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Hailing from Copenhagen, Rune Fisker shows his talented lively and dynamic drawings and illustrations on website and Instagram
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May we all be forgiven
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Recently spotted in Kinfolk magazine the photography works of Peter Kragballe from Copenhagen that captivates with the warmth of unknown homes. His obsess to details on photos is beautiful and perfectly aligned to the whole set of pictures of each house
More than a year ago, 20-year-old photographer Marcus Møller Bitsch, aka Marcus MB, began a personal photographic journey. Every day for one year, he created a new portrait filled with surreal mystery and intrigue.