When Lace Becomes Architecture Some artists build a visual language so consistent and so precise that it becomes immediately legible across any surface, any city, any scale. NeSpoon, the Warsaw-based street artist, is one of them. For fifteen years, she has been translating the intricate geometry of traditional Polish lace, specifically the handmade Koniaków patterns originating from the Silesian Beskids, into monumental murals, ceramic installations, and ephemeral street works that now exist across more than 100 cities in 40 countries. Her work has appeared at the Louvre-Lens Museum, the Polish Pavilion at Expo 2020 in Dubai, and the European Parliament. She is currently developing a project connected to the reopening of the Pergamon Museum in Berlin. These are not incidental institutional appearances. They reflect a sustained critical recognition of what NeSpoon is actually doing: rescuing an anonymous, feminine, centuries-old craft tradition from the margins of cultural memory and returning it, enlarged, abstracted, and placed on the most visible surfaces of contemporary urban life. The Mural at DOMOTEKA The new commission is a large-scale mural being created in the main hall of DOMOTEKA Design Centre, Warsaw's first retail destination entirely dedicated to design, located less than twenty minutes from the city centre. Work began in March 2026, with the piece scheduled for completion by the end of the month. Visitors to the venue can observe the process live, from initial sketches through to final detail. The choice of location is worth examining. DOMOTEKA is not a gallery or a museum. It is a commercial design centre housing over 600 brands. The decision to invite NeSpoon to create a permanent mural in its primary circulation space is a statement about the relationship between retail, design, and public art, and about what kind of experience a design-focused commercial venue can credibly offer beyond the transactional. Agata Brzezińska, Senior Director and Head of CEE at Pradera, the fund that owns DOMOTEKA, framed the invitation as a natural continuation of the venue's identity: a place oriented toward quality, design, and interior architecture that aims to be more than a commercial space. Art here is not decoration. It is meant to generate a different kind of engagement with the space. The Source Material: Koniaków Lace Understanding the mural requires understanding the source. Koniaków lace is a craft tradition associated with the village of Koniaków in southern Poland, produced almost exclusively by women using needles and thread, with patterns passed between generations without written documentation. The designs are characterised by radial symmetry, dense interlocking curves, and a structural logic that is at once highly decorative and geometrically rigorous. NeSpoon's relationship to this material is neither nostalgic nor ethnographic. What she extracts from it is the structural principle, the underlying geometry of intersection, repetition, and void, and she scales it to the dimensions of a building facade or, in this case, a commercial hall. The anonymity of the original makers is part of what she is addressing. These patterns were created by women whose names were never recorded. Placing them on the surfaces of cities is one way of insisting on their presence in cultural memory. Scale, Surface, and the Logic of the Work At a monumental scale, lace undergoes a transformation that is not merely quantitative. What reads at close range as textile, intimate, tactile, domestic, becomes at building scale something closer to structural drawing. The voids that define the pattern in fabric become negative space in a mural composition. The threads become lines. The result has been described accurately as resembling delicate openwork structures floating across facades, which is the visual quality that has made NeSpoon's murals globally circulated images: they are simultaneously recognisable as pattern and as architecture. The interior environment of DOMOTEKA presents different conditions than the exterior facade. Controlled light, a defined ceiling height, a nd a surrounding context of furniture showrooms and design objects. Interior murals of this scale carry a different relationship to the viewer: the distance is fixed, the approach is frontal, and the context is commercial rather than civic. These are not deficiencies. They are simply different spatial terms that the work must negotiate. ✦ ArchUp Editorial Insight The DOMOTEKA commission raises a question increasingly relevant in contemporary design culture: what does it mean for a commercial retail venue to commission serious public art? NeSpoon's source material, anonymous, feminine, pre-industrial craft, carries enough cultural specificity that it cannot be reduced to decorative wallpaper without remainder. The Koniaków tradition is not a generic pattern. It is geographically specific, socially embedded knowledge production that happens to generate extraordinary visual material. Whether the interior commercial context sustains that specificity, or flattens the work into atmosphere, will depend partly on how the venue contextualises the commission and partly on the intrinsic qualities of the work itself, which across very different urban environments have consistently proven durable. Conclusion The DOMOTEKA mural is a genuine test of what public art can do inside the spaces of everyday commercial life. It is worth following not as a marketing exercise but as a case study in how craft memory, street art practice, and the designed interior can meet, and what each gives up or gains in that encounter.

When Lace Becomes Architecture: NeSpoon at DOMOTEKA

Home » Design » When Lace Becomes Architecture: NeSpoon at DOMOTEKA

When Lace Becomes Architecture

Some artists build a visual language so consistent and so precise that it becomes immediately legible across any surface, any city, any scale. NeSpoon, the Warsaw-based street artist, is one of them. For fifteen years, she has been translating the intricate geometry of traditional Polish lace, specifically the handmade Koniaków patterns originating from the Silesian Beskids, into monumental murals, ceramic installations, and ephemeral street works that now exist across more than 100 cities in 40 countries.

Her work has appeared at the Louvre-Lens Museum, the Polish Pavilion at Expo 2020 in Dubai, and the European Parliament. She is currently developing a project connected to the reopening of the Pergamon Museum in Berlin. These are not incidental institutional appearances. They reflect a sustained critical recognition of what NeSpoon is actually doing: rescuing an anonymous, feminine, centuries-old craft tradition from the margins of cultural memory and returning it, enlarged, abstracted, and placed on the most visible surfaces of contemporary urban life.

The Mural at DOMOTEKA

The new commission is a large-scale mural being created in the main hall of DOMOTEKA Design Centre, Warsaw’s first retail destination entirely dedicated to design, located less than twenty minutes from the city centre. Work began in March 2026, with the piece scheduled for completion by the end of the month. Visitors to the venue can observe the process live, from initial sketches through to final detail.

The choice of location is worth examining. DOMOTEKA is not a gallery or a museum. It is a commercial design centre housing over 600 brands. The decision to invite NeSpoon to create a permanent mural in its primary circulation space is a statement about the relationship between retail, design, and public art, and about what kind of experience a design-focused commercial venue can credibly offer beyond the transactional.

Agata Brzezińska, Senior Director and Head of CEE at Pradera, the fund that owns DOMOTEKA, framed the invitation as a natural continuation of the venue’s identity: a place oriented toward quality, design, and interior architecture that aims to be more than a commercial space. Art here is not decoration. It is meant to generate a different kind of engagement with the space.

The Source Material: Koniaków Lace

Understanding the mural requires understanding the source. Koniaków lace is a craft tradition associated with the village of Koniaków in southern Poland, produced almost exclusively by women using needles and thread, with patterns passed between generations without written documentation. The designs are characterised by radial symmetry, dense interlocking curves, and a structural logic that is at once highly decorative and geometrically rigorous.

NeSpoon’s relationship to this material is neither nostalgic nor ethnographic. What she extracts from it is the structural principle, the underlying geometry of intersection, repetition, and void, and she scales it to the dimensions of a building facade or, in this case, a commercial hall. The anonymity of the original makers is part of what she is addressing. These patterns were created by women whose names were never recorded. Placing them on the surfaces of cities is one way of insisting on their presence in cultural memory.

Scale, Surface, and the Logic of the Work

At a monumental scale, lace undergoes a transformation that is not merely quantitative. What reads at close range as textile, intimate, tactile, domestic, becomes at building scale something closer to structural drawing. The voids that define the pattern in fabric become negative space in a mural composition. The threads become lines. The result has been described accurately as resembling delicate openwork structures floating across facades, which is the visual quality that has made NeSpoon’s murals globally circulated images: they are simultaneously recognisable as pattern and as architecture.

The interior environment of DOMOTEKA presents different conditions than the exterior facade. Controlled light, a defined ceiling height, a nd a surrounding context of furniture showrooms and design objects. Interior murals of this scale carry a different relationship to the viewer: the distance is fixed, the approach is frontal, and the context is commercial rather than civic. These are not deficiencies. They are simply different spatial terms that the work must negotiate.

✦ ArchUp Editorial Insight

The DOMOTEKA commission raises a question increasingly relevant in contemporary design culture: what does it mean for a commercial retail venue to commission serious public art? NeSpoon’s source material, anonymous, feminine, pre-industrial craft, carries enough cultural specificity that it cannot be reduced to decorative wallpaper without remainder. The Koniaków tradition is not a generic pattern. It is geographically specific, socially embedded knowledge production that happens to generate extraordinary visual material. Whether the interior commercial context sustains that specificity, or flattens the work into atmosphere, will depend partly on how the venue contextualises the commission and partly on the intrinsic qualities of the work itself, which across very different urban environments have consistently proven durable.

Conclusion

The DOMOTEKA mural is a genuine test of what public art can do inside the spaces of everyday commercial life. It is worth following not as a marketing exercise but as a case study in how craft memory, street art practice, and the designed interior can meet, and what each gives up or gains in that encounter.

Brought to you by the ArchUp Editorial Team

Inspiration starts here. Dive deeper into ArchitectureInterior DesignResearchCitiesDesign, and cutting-edge Projects on ArchUp.

Further Reading From ArchUp

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *