Kengo Kuma and Dinesen Shape a Living Installation in Copenhagen
Copenhagen Contemporary, a former industrial hall, has been reworked into an immersive architectural environment through Earth | Tree, a new site-specific installation by Kengo Kuma and his studio Kengo Kuma & Associates, in collaboration with Dinesen. Opened on 28 March 2026 as part of the institution’s CCreate programme, the project marks KKAA’s first major exhibition in Scandinavia, built around a dedicated installation.
At the centre of Earth | Tree is a suspended structure composed of handcrafted Douglas fir elements, developed by Dinesen and shaped through a process that extends beyond fabrication. The wood was processed in collaboration with the Troldkær School, involving students with special needs, embedding the installation within a broader social framework of making.
Light plays a defining role in the installation. The structure is designed to filter and modulate daylight across the space, drawing from the Japanese concept of komorebi, the shifting patterns of sunlight through trees. As the day progresses, the installation subtly transforms, not through mechanical intervention but through natural variation, making time itself a material condition of the work.
The project brings together a restrained palette of materials from Danish manufacturers: timber from Dinesen, brick from Petersen Tegl, and lighting by Anker & Co. Rather than operating as discrete components, these elements are treated as part of a continuous spatial composition. The warm tones of handcrafted brick ground the installation, while the timber structure introduces scale, texture, and scent, reinforcing a sensory reading of architecture.
This alignment of material and atmosphere reflects a shared approach between Kengo Kuma and Dinesen. In Kuma’s work, wood is often used to dissolve boundaries between built form and landscape, favouring permeability and lightness over monumentality. Dinesen’s practice similarly begins with the forest, emphasising the inherent qualities of timber through careful selection and craftsmanship. In Earth | Tree, these positions converge, not as a statement but as a constructed condition.
The installation also foregrounds questions of material responsibility. Using sustainably sourced wood and incorporating strategies for reuse, the project aligns with Dinesen’s ongoing emphasis on longevity and full utilisation of resources.
More than a static exhibition, Earth | Tree positions architecture as a sensory and temporal experience, one in which structure, light, and material remain inseparable, and where the space is continuously shaped by the passage of time.
CCreate: Kengo Kuma/KKAA – Earth | Tree
28 March 2026 – 21 February 2027
Copenhagen Contemporary, Copenhagen

