For his Moscow apartment, interior designer and artist was inspired by the geometries of the Russian Avant-garde, more specifically Constructivism, an artistic and architectural movement that reigned in the country during the 1920s. Most of the custom-designed furniture that populates this 74 square meter interior follows a similar aesthetic, sprinkled with a sense of frivolity introduced through his own artwork.
Visitors are welcomed into the interior via a geometric, black and white hallway. The light-coloured marble floor is occasionally interrupted with inserted graphic shapes made from a contrasting stone. The resulting surface is more akin to a giant chess board than a typical hallway, bringing visual interest to a space that is too often overlooked.