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At The Mindcraft Project 2025 Nature Is the Ultimate Designer

11.03.25 | By
At The Mindcraft Project 2025 Nature Is the Ultimate Designer

Designers often say they’re inspired by nature – its colors, textures, and forms. But The Mindcraft Exhibition 2025 looks deeper, beyond appearances, into the quiet systems that make nature work. Geometry, balance, and physics all form part of nature’s underlying logic – and that’s precisely what this year’s exhibition explored. Held at The Lab in Copenhagen, The Mindcraft Project brought together 10 Danish designers who saw nature not just as inspiration, but as instruction.

A variety of contemporary furniture and sculptural pieces are arranged in a minimalist gallery with white walls and a concrete floor

Led by Copenhagen Design Agency (CDA), The Mindcraft Project invited Danish designer and curator Pil Bredahl to curate this year’s exhibition. Known for her thoughtful engagement with both material and meaning, Bredahl brought a fresh, investigative lens to the role of design in shaping our collective future. “What makes Pil unique is her ability to draw on Denmark’s deep knowledge of material and craft, whilst having an unwavering devotion towards the power of innovation and radical thinking as a driver of change,” shared Anders Kongskov and Kristian Kastoft, founders of CDA and co-directors of The Mindcraft Project. Under her direction, this year’s edition became less about what nature looks like – and more about what it teaches us.

A variety of contemporary furniture and sculptural pieces are arranged in a minimalist gallery with white walls and a concrete floor

Throughout the exhibition, the connection to nature revealed itself not through imitation, but through interpretation. Each of the 10 participating designers explored the systems found within the natural world – modular growth patterns, geometric repetition, and organic imperfection – translating them into new forms and materials. The result is a collection alive with rhythm and structure: objects that expanded, repeated, or evolved like organisms. Some drew directly from nature’s efficiency and modularity, while others embraced its irregularities, using raw textures and hand-formed details to mirror the tension between control and chance.

A variety of contemporary furniture and sculptural pieces are arranged in a minimalist gallery with white walls and a concrete floor

“This year’s exhibition displays works in materials from the mineral kingdom, to soil, glass, wood, and textile, all in different stages of man-made processing. All the selected exhibitors have their personal aesthetic language where they translate ancient knowledge through modern and relevant craft and design,” says Pil Bredahl, curator of The Mindcraft Exhibition 2025.

A variety of contemporary furniture and sculptural pieces are arranged in a minimalist gallery with white walls and a concrete floor

The exhibitors in this year’s presentation included: Ahm x Lund, Anne Brandhøj, Anne Dorthe Vester, Bendixen & Baruël, Hilda Piazzolla, Jeppe Søndergaard, Kasper Kjeldgaard, Kasper Kyster, Lærke Lillelund, and Morten Klitgaard.

A large, circular wooden panel with a horizontal slit and internal lighting is mounted on a white wall above a concrete floor.

“We believe that by embracing new technology and joining it with the wisdom of the hand, we can
create objects that are echoes of wilderness, nature and forest – objects that can guide us towards
new lighting landmarks and rethink what a lamp – and light, can look like.” – Ahm + Lund

A large, circular wooden panel with a horizontal slit and internal lighting is mounted on a white wall above a concrete floor.

Two abstract wooden sculptures on a gray floor: a short, stacked piece on the left and a taller, four-legged structure with an organic, cloud-like center on the right

“Working with solid wood brings both constraints and possibilities that I thrive on. I love working
within the rules that timber sets, while constantly pushing the boundaries of scale, volume, and
proportion. There’s a presence, a weight, and a tactile richness in solid wood that nothing else can
quite replicate.” – Anne Brandhøj

A wooden sculpture featuring a smooth, abstract, cloud-like form encased within a rectangular wooden frame structure

Three wooden stools with curved, intersecting legs are arranged on a polished concrete floor against a plain white wall

“I am still in the process of becoming familiar with the final design myself. For that reason, I
welcome visitors to approach these pieces with a similar sense of reflection and openness. Ideally,
they recognise both the efficiency of the construction and the sculptural qualities of the form, and
sense how industrial processes can coexist with a more crafted, expressive character.” – Anne Dorthe Vester

Three wooden stools with curved legs and seats are arranged on a smooth, gray floor against a plain white wall

A minimalist wooden sculpture with branch-like limbs stands on a polished concrete floor; a light blue fabric is draped near the top against a plain white wall

“The process is very intuitive in relation to the branches – each of them have their own shape, and
the spatial and poetic potential of each is different. We consider each branch as a unique shape and
being, and at the same time we group them into types – each with their own logic, but always with
variety. We reflect on how to understand this; the uniqueness vs the consistency of these natural
structures.” – Bendixen & Baruël

A dried plant stem with two thin branches holds a fragile, translucent white and pale blue leaf against a plain white background

Five cylindrical, textured objects in various colors (blue, orange, green, white, gray) are arranged on a polished concrete floor against a plain white wall

“This collection is an exploration into infill patterns, where they are exposed as the primary
structure. While in plastic they print with machine-like precision, clay introduces softness, weight,
and unpredictability.” – Hilda Piazzolla

Five colorful, intricately woven baskets of varying shapes and textures are arranged on a smooth, neutral-toned surface

Geometric metal grid sculptures are mounted on and suspended around a white column in a sunlit gallery space with large windows

“By firing at high temperatures, the materiality of the brick is set free to transform as it pleases.
What was once rigid becomes playful forms and surfaces, returning to the natural state it came
from.” – Jeppe Søndergaard

Geometric metal grid sculptures are mounted on and suspended around a white column in a sunlit gallery space with large windows

A minimalist metal bench sits in a bright, empty room with sunlight casting grid-like shadows on the wall and several small objects hanging from the ceiling

“One similarity between these two projects is that they both originate from working with the mobilé.
I work a lot with the relationship between abstract and functional design. These two objects are
functional results born out of abstract process.” – Kasper Kjeldgaard

Four small metallic objects are suspended from the ceiling by thin wires against a plain white background

Several rectangular, tube-like light fixtures are suspended from the ceiling and standing on the concrete floor in a minimalist gallery space

“Modularity has always fascinated me, and I have explored it before, though not to this
extent. I find it fascinating how repeating the same component can result in vastly different
outcomes. It’s a bit like Lego – or, if you go way back, the brick. I know my design doesn’t have the
full flexibility of Lego, but perhaps this is where my role as a designer comes in, guiding the
functional and aesthetic outcomes.” – Kasper Kyster

Several rectangular, tube-like light fixtures are suspended from the ceiling and standing on the concrete floor in a minimalist gallery space.

Two abstract hanging sculptures: one small, beige, and clustered in a spiral; one larger, red, and elongated, both suspended in front of a plain white wall

“I think it is interesting to see work that contains a sense of mystery into how it is put together and
the craftsmanship behind a piece of art or design. I hope that visitors can touch and explore these
pieces and learn about the techniques and materials I have used in creating them.” – Lærke Lillelund

A close-up of a red and white spiral structure resembling a stylized DNA double helix model against a plain background

A wooden display stand holds five upright, dark, textured sculptural objects in a minimalist gallery space with a plain white wall and concrete floor

“This presentation draws on the tradition of cabinets of curiosities once found in royal collections
around the world – displays that showcased unusual natural specimens and artefacts brought back
from early explorations by the Western world. In reinterpreting this format, Aragonit offers a subtle
commentary on how we continue to frame nature as something exotic, rare, and mysterious.” – Morten Klitgaard

A wooden display stand holds five upright, dark, textured sculptural objects in a minimalist gallery space with a plain white wall and concrete floor

In the end, The Mindcraft Exhibition 2025 reaffirmed what Danish design has long understood: progress doesn’t come from resisting nature, but from learning alongside it. Through experimentation, material sensitivity, and a deep respect for process, the exhibition invited us to see design as a living system – one that evolves, adapts, and will always endure.

To learn more about The Mindcraft Exhibition 2025 and its featured designers, visit mindcraftproject.com.

Photos by Benjamin Lund for The Mindcraft Project.

As the Senior Contributing Editor, Vy Yang is obsessed with discovering ways to live well + with intention through design. She's probably sharing what she finds over on Instagram stories. You can also find her at vytranyang.com.