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This week: Pol Taburet, Studio Bright, Nick Ross, Buol & Zünd, DIIR, Nic Morgante, Hannes Peer, András Zoltai, Schinkel Pavillon
Before we dive in, we'd like to share some recent updates at Thisispaper+.
① New Guide Released: Explore our latest guide to Milan—is where form meets function and fashion shakes hands with architecture.
② New locations: We’ve expanded our guides with fresh additions to Berlin, Milan and Basel and Madrid (coming) Guides + Off-the-Grid, DwellWell and Climax Edition.
In a compelling solo debut in Germany, Pol Taburet harnesses the layered narratives of transformation and identity through paintings, sculptures, and immersive scenography at Berlin’s Schinkel Pavillon.
Studio Bright's Hedge and Arbour House reframes suburban living, blending Australian architecture and landscape into a layered, low-impact dialogue with Melbourne’s bushland edge.
Nick Ross continues to test how far restraint can go before vanishing. In Mixed Grill, shown at 3 Days of Design, he turns leftover wood into vases—distilled forms balanced between structure and trace.
In the historic heart of Basel, architects Buol & Zünd have woven a uniquely intricate tapestry of music, community, and architectural expression in their design for the Jazz Campus.
From Thisispaper+ Member: In Madrid’s Chamberí district, espacio DIIR redefines the architecture studio as a public gesture—a space where a monumental table becomes both a workspace and a statement of intent, bridging process, material, and form.
Tucked away at the quiet edge of Bittern on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula, a modest cabin stands among the stringy barks. Designed by architect Nic Morgante, Bittern Cabin is both a retreat and a tool — a place to rest, and a place to care for land.
Signor Lievito by Hannes Peer brings the art of baking into a carefully composed space where terracotta tones and soft light create a dialogue between form and flavour.
Thisispaper Guide to Milan
Milan is where form meets function and fashion shakes hands with architecture. It’s a place of precision and flair, of espresso-fueled mornings and concept store afternoons. A city that speaks softly, but leaves a lasting impression on those who listen.
András Zoltai’s photography from Majuli island intimately captures human resilience and coexistence with water, challenging conventional narratives of environmental crisis through quiet, enduring imagery.