The flat of a young Polish artist is a refined art gallery.
The flat of Grzegorz Worpus Budziejewski, in the heart of Warsaw, is flooded with light: it seeps in through the large windows, creating bright effects and veils on the white walls; it crosses and dominates every corner of the rooms.




Grzegorz has a real passion for design furniture and lamps; over the course of a few years, he chased them and placed them in the two large rooms that make up his small 67-sqm home. Art is the leitmotif of the soul that permeates this house.
The artistic collection is as varied as ever: from the paintings of great contemporary masters to his canvases filled with colours – now bold, now delicate –, up to the refined furniture and cult objects of great international design.

In the two rooms, as in an enclosed, precious domestic art gallery, there is an authentic triumph of designer furnishings. We start in the hall, from the Zig Zag chair designed in 1934 by Gerrit Rietveld to the enveloping Pulp by Christophe Pillet, from the Wassily Chair by Marcel Breuer to the postmodern Ekstrem designed in 1972 by Terje Ekstørm.
A real triumph: from the East Cay pouffe to the Rosco sofa designed by Piotr Kuchciński. And, what about the lamps? From the iconic Chiara by Mario Bellini to Mezzachimera by Vico Magistretti, up to the classic Phantella created in 1971 by Verner Panton (1926-1998) together with Louis Poulsen.

Grzegorz is a son of art, and his natural inclination and love for design are also congenial to his activity as a visual artist, painter and set designer.
Every detail in the choice of the location is studied, balancing bright effects and living comfort, so that the colours are vibrant, such as deep blue, tempered by the cut flowers and the natural green of the lush plants.
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