Step Into This Supremely Suprematist Home In Kyiv
More than a century ago, the Ukrainian artist Kazimir Malevich helped found the Suprematism movement, which populated abstracted white fields with geometric shapes in bold colors. Yevheniia Sytnik, founder of the Kyiv-based firm Dihome, wanted to honor this Ukrainian avant-garde legacy in the design of a 452-square-foot apartment in the capitol. “In the world, he is mistakenly considered a Russian artist because Russia appropriated his legacy,” Sytnik says. This move had particular resonance last year, when the project began. “We’re talking about Kyiv in 2023. Yes, the state of who needs design during war? was over. We design, plan, create, live. But what about art?”
First, they needed a blank canvas. The team removed walls from the two-room apartment, leaving a sole, separate volume for the bathroom. A concrete pillar became an axis; a bedroom curtain conceals a wardrobe cabinet. “The interior is built on numerous technically complex joints, material intersections, and engineering communications,” Sytnik says. A wall of glass blocks, for example, required the builders to grind them three times to ensure they perfectly achieved the room height. “Glass bricks have often been associated with ‘Soviet kitsch,’” she says, “but primarily, glass blocks conserved electricity by providing insulation.” Here, they both define space and direct the flow of natural light throughout the apartment.
While Sytnik was still measuring everything for the renovation, she happened upon the Instagram page of artist Tasha Oro. “She considers herself a direct heir to the Ukrainian avant-garde,” Sytnik says, “in her experiments with sculpture and monumental reliefs.” A series of panels Oro called Monumental stood out. “The themes and motifs seemed to somehow mirror the urban landscape outside the apartment windows,” Sytnik said. The clients agreed, and installed a number of panels around their home. “Art has a way of adding depth and dimension to an interior,” she says. Not to mention a sense of history—and of a brighter future.
Marvel at the Geometric Brilliance of This Kyiv Home by Dihome
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