Kultur

Bruno Mathsson Design Residency 2026: Maria Jeglinska-Adamczewska

En kvinna i sin ateljé.
Foto: Kasia Bobula

The Bruno Mathsson Design Residency 2026 was awarded to Maria Jeglinska-Adamczewska.

Maria Jeglinska-Adamczewska (b. 1983 in France, based in France and Poland) graduated from ECAL’s Industrial Design program in 2007 and received a scholarship from the IKEA Foundation, which led her to work for Galerie kreo in Paris, Konstantin Grcic in Munich and Alexander Taylor in London.

She works across a wide range of commissions, including industrial design, exhibition design, as well as research-based projects in the field of design. Her clients include, among others, Ligne Roset, Kvadrat, Vitra, the London Design Biennale and the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw. From 2018 until 2020 she served as the Creative Director of Arena Design, a design fair in Poland.

Her work is regularly exhibited internationally and has been shown at the Design Museum in London, the Villa Noailles, Barbican Art Gallery, Centre Pompidou-Metz and Triennale di Milano. In 2022, The Little Black Chair was acquired by the Vitra Design Museum for its permanent collection. In October 2012 she curated and designed the exhibition Ways Of Seeing/Sitting at the Łódź Design Festival in Poland. She was also the co-curator and designer of the Polish Pavilion at the inaugural London Design Biennale in 2016. In 2025 she co-founded the design brand GestGest.

Maria Jeglinska-Adamczewska: "I feel honoured and humbled to be the recipient of the 2026 Bruno Mathsson Design Residency. From this immersion, I aim to observe, reflect, research on the architecture of the house, integrating my roles as furniture and exhibition designer. This period will deepen my understanding of natural materials and regional production techniques available in the Jönköping area, while also gaining a closer insight into Mathsson’s vision. Engaging with Scandinavian design culture and regional craftsmanship will challenge and inspire my practice, fostering a continuation of the legacy of human-centered, material-sensitive design that Mathsson so eloquently embodied.”

Statement of the jury

"Maria Jeglinska-Adamczewska is a prolific designer who combines an interest in craft and making processes with a great formal sensitivity. Both in her work as a furniture and object designers, as well as in her spatial works, she is demonstrating her skills to use color in multiple ways and to draw inspirations from design history. She is at a point in her career where she has already gained international recognition, yet she can still profit of the opportunities that the Bruno Mathsson Design Residency can offer, especially by widening her research into crafts processes and manufacturing."