Ulrikk Dufossé
Ulrikk Dufossé’s sculptures inhabit the space between drawing and volume, craft and apparition. Hand-woven from kilometres of galvanized wire, his suspended forms emerge through a slow, meditative process of knotting and knitting, transforming an industrial material into something unexpectedly organic and weightless. Inspired by traditional fish-trap weaving and guided by an intuitive, almost gestural approach, each work unfolds like a three-dimensional line drawn in air.
Balancing fragility and structure, the sculptures hover like living organisms or drifting constellations, their intricate meshes capturing light while casting shifting shadows that become part of the work itself. Circular rhythms and complex volumes create a quiet dialogue with surrounding architecture, allowing space, movement, and perception to continuously reshape the piece.
Rooted in craftsmanship yet deeply poetic, Dufossé’s practice recalls the legacy of woven sculpture while asserting a contemporary sensitivity — where repetition becomes meditation, material becomes emotion, and solid matter dissolves into atmosphere.









