As layers of paint and colour create depth in painting, I build each interior’s aesthetic singularity. I create dedicated palettes for every commission.
These palettes are like painted canvases where every hue — from soft pastels to intense, saturated tones — plays a unique role.
Every colour has its own place, function and agency in designing. I treat colour as both a means of expression and an instrument for shaping distinctive space.
The space I design is not only filled with colour, they become plastic, sculptural wholes. Colour in design is more than just specific shades – it is a sensory experience, engaging the senses and transforming space into a living, dynamic organism.
Interiors invite touch and feeling. Colour, together with the surface, texture and material, composes a refined harmony—moving through space like a quiet melody.
I convert an interior’s challenges and imperfections into signature qualities — a feature impossible to reproduce elsewhere — creating unique value.
I combine styles, forms and shades to create a coherent, yet self-evident whole—free from convention in how particular elements are combined.
I transform space from abstract to expressive. With roots in late-modern architecture of the late 1940s, I privilege space, structure and sensitivity to material.
I place special emphasis on raw form and the revelation of structural elements. Interiors with a Brutalist note marry minimal form with keen attention to structural and functional detail—granting a strong identity. Through Brutalism, I turn abstraction into expression.
I work with substantial, often raw materials: stone, wood, glass, ceramic and concrete; they highlight the power of the structure.
What makes colour design so exceptional is the deep understanding of how colour relates to human functioning. During my PhD studies at the Gdańsk University of Technology, I explored how inappropriate colour selection can affect the psyche and the spaces we inhabit. Colour, as a tool for shaping space, acts on the senses and supports wellbeing.
Colours become protagonists in setting the atmosphere that shapes how we feel and function. The uncanny usage of colour — sensitive to psychological nuance — can shift our perception and state of mind.