Sobolewska - Ursic Zofia

Krakówinstagram
Kraków

She studied architecture at dieAngewandte (University of Applied Arts) in Vienna under the guidance of Wolf D. Prix, Zaha Hadid, and Hernan Diaz Alonso.
 In her studio, working under the name Zofia Sobolewska Ursic, she creates using a variety of materials: wood, glass, metal, stone, and straw, whose unique qualities and the art of marquetry she mastered at the Parisian Atelier Lison de Caunes.

"Everything I create, I perceive as a space for dialogue. I approach design and creation very personally. I enjoy crafting objects with my own hands because it allows me to imbue them not only with my story but also with my emotions."

Currently, she is working on two projects: a collection of objects combining folk and bourgeois motifs, crafted from rye straw, and a collection of sculptural quills and inkwells titled Pensée Folle, which has been recognized by the curators of "COLLECT Design" in New York.
In 2024, she was included in the AD100 list, published for the first time by the Polish edition of Architectural Digest.

She studied architecture at dieAngewandte (University of Applied Arts) in Vienna under the guidance of Wolf D. Prix, Zaha Hadid, and Hernan Diaz Alonso.
 In her studio, working under the name Zofia Sobolewska Ursic, she creates using a variety of materials: wood, glass, metal, stone, and straw, whose unique qualities and the art of marquetry she mastered at the Parisian Atelier Lison de Caunes.

"Everything I create, I perceive as a space for dialogue. I approach design and creation very personally. I enjoy crafting objects with my own hands because it allows me to imbue them not only with my story but also with my emotions."

Currently, she is working on two projects: a collection of objects combining folk and bourgeois motifs, crafted from rye straw, and a collection of sculptural quills and inkwells titled Pensée Folle, which has been recognized by the curators of "COLLECT Design" in New York.
In 2024, she was included in the AD100 list, published for the first time by the Polish edition of Architectural Digest.