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Copenhagen Contemporary

Earth | Tree

28.03.26 – 21.02.27

CCreate: Kengo Kuma/KKAA

There is a unique Japanese concept that describes sunlight filtering through the leaves of a tree canopy: Komorebi (木漏れ日). Few languages have an equivalent word – but our bodies know the feeling. Research shows that simply spending time in a forest lowers stress hormones, reduces heart rate and alleviates anxiety, depression and fatigue.

This is the feeling that architect Kengo Kuma/KKAA has turned into a physical space at CC. The installation Earth | Tree is rooted in one of humanity’s most fundamental impulses: the need to seek shelter. Not as an abstract idea, but as a bodily memory – the feeling of standing beneath a large tree, sheltered from the outside world and the rumination of everyday life.

Materials with memory

Kengo Kuma is known for his sensory approach to materials and works from a philosophy of “soft architecture” – an architecture that emerges in dialogue with the physical space, nature and people.

In Earth | Tree, wood and brick have been chosen for their tactile and historical dimensions. The wood brings the scent of the forest into the space. The brick anchors the installation in a millennia-old building tradition. Both materials are culturally rooted in Japanese and Nordic attitudes to nature alike – and it is the meeting between these two traditions that Yuki Ikeguchi, who has led KKAA’s work on the installation, has shaped into a unified expression.

“Play of light, air and shadow is some of the most important materials to play with.” – Yuki Ikeguchi

Within the installation, all senses are invited: the scent of wood and earth, the roughness of brick beneath your fingertips, the movement of light across the floor. Architecture is not experienced here primarily through the eyes – but with the entire body. Or as Yuki Ikeguchi puts it: “We just hope that people would be drawn to it, be curious and simply enjoy it.”

You are also a maker

A central point of Earth | Tree is that creativity is not reserved for architects. In the exhibition’s workshop zone, you can set things in motion yourself: shape landscapes in sand, build with Tsumiki – the Japanese wooden blocks that Kengo Kuma designed for play, inspired by his own childhood – and experiment with Danish-produced wooden blocks and miniature bricks.

This is not a children’s activity alongside the exhibition. It is the heart of the exhibition. Because Earth | Tree is about the fact that all people – regardless of background or experience – have the capacity to shape their surroundings. All it takes is materials, time and the courage to begin.

Photo: Kengo Kuma

KKAA is an internationally recognized Japanese architectural firm, founded in 1990 by architect Kengo Kuma (b. 1954). The firm has created impressive projects such as the Japan National Stadium in Tokyo, Japan, and the Odupanzarı Modern Art Museum in Eskişehir, Turkey. In Denmark, KKAA is behind the award-winning H.C. Andersen House in Odense and the upcoming Water Culture House on Papirøen, Copenhagen, expected to open in autumn 2026.

CCreate is a three-year exhibition program focusing on creativity. Each year, one of today’s leading creative minds is invited to develop an installation that draws the audience into their creative process. Across aesthetic disciplines, CCreate explores creativity as an inherent human quality that can be nurtured and strengthened.

Supported by

Nordea
Realdania
Dreyers Fond
The Danish Arts Foundation
Toyota Foundation

 

Sponsored by

Buro Happold
Dinesen
Petersen Tegl
Anker & Co
Kvadrat