Krzysztof Cichoń Collection
Manhattan – Custom-made wallpaper

Manhattan – Custom-made wallpaper

From €93,95

Soho – Custom-made wallpaper

Soho – Custom-made wallpaper

From €93,95

Bronx – Circle Standard Wallpaper

Bronx – Circle Standard Wallpaper

€151,95

Harlem – Wallpaper Rolls

Harlem – Wallpaper Rolls

€222,95

Bronx – Custom-made wallpaper

Bronx – Custom-made wallpaper

From €93,95

Harlem – Standard Bow Wallpaper

Harlem – Standard Bow Wallpaper

€327,95

Manhattan – Standard Arc Wallpaper

Manhattan – Standard Arc Wallpaper

€327,95

Bronx – Standard Bow Wallpaper

Bronx – Standard Bow Wallpaper

€327,95

Soho – Standard Arc Wallpaper

Soho – Standard Arc Wallpaper

€327,95

Harlem – Circle Standard Wallpaper

Harlem – Circle Standard Wallpaper

€151,95

Manhattan – Standard Circle Wallpaper

Manhattan – Standard Circle Wallpaper

€151,95

Soho – Circle Standard Wallpaper

Soho – Circle Standard Wallpaper

€151,95

Manhattan – Wallpaper Rolls

Manhattan – Wallpaper Rolls

€222,95

Bronx – Wallpaper Rolls

Bronx – Wallpaper Rolls

€222,95

Soho – Wallpaper Rolls

Soho – Wallpaper Rolls

€222,95

Harlem – Custom-made wallpaper

Harlem – Custom-made wallpaper

From €93,95

Krzysztof Cichoń Collection

Krzysztof Cichoń is a painter, graphic designer, and architect. He lectures at SWPS University of Social Sciences and Humanities in Wrocław and is a graduate of the Wrocław University of Science and Technology. He has created numerous murals in Poland and Austria, as well as individual fashion designs inspired by typography, lettering, and symbolism. He runs his own architectural studio while also intensively exploring various media and forms of expression.

His work is dominated by large-scale paintings in acrylic, oil, marker, spray, and crayon. The paintings often bear traces of spontaneous creation—handprints, footprints, or body impressions—that become a record of energy and emotion. Multi-layered overpaintings create a three-dimensional texture, revealing the process of creation, the deformations, and tensions inherent in its development.

Typography, inspired by the Inca and Greek alphabets, plays a significant role, from which the artist created his own system of symbols. Letters and symbols intertwine with human and animal figures, creating compositions of brutal elegance. These contrasts—between spontaneity and precision, purity of form and its destruction—define the character of his painting and constitute its exceptional power.