-
FINE ART
-
FURNITURE & LIGHTING
-
NEW + CUSTOM
- Featured Bespoke Articles
- Hélène de Saint Lager’s Designs…
- Amorph-Where wood comes to life
- Markus Haase: Translating Artistic...
- Trent Jansen: Design Meets Heritage
- Hoon Moreau: Sculptural Poetry
- Kam Tin: The Art of Modern Baroque Furniture
- Gregory Nangle and Outcast Studios
- Roman Plyus Designs Furniture That’s…
- Ervan Boulloud: Daring Ingenuity
- Julian Mayor: Mirror Image
-
DECORATIVE ARTS
- JEWELRY
-
INTERIORS
- Interior Design Books you Need to Know
- 2021’s Best New Design Books: 9 Top Picks
- Robert Stilin: New Work, The Refined Home: Sheldon Harte and Inside Palm Springs by Dan Flood
- Ashe Leandro: Architecture + Interiors, David Kleinberg: Interiors, and The Living Room from The Design Leadership Network
- The Elegant Life by Alex Papachristidis and More is More Is More: Today’s Maximalist Interiors by Carl Dellatore
- Extraordinary Interiors by Suzanne Tucker and Destinations by Jean-Louis Deniot
- New books by Alyssa Kapito, Rees Roberts + Partners, and Gil Schafer, and Bunny Williams: Life in the Garden
- Torrey: Private Spaces: Great American Design by Andrew Torrey and Marshall Watson’s Defining Elegance
- Peter Pennoyer Architects: City | Country and Jed Johnson: Opulent Restraint
- Distinctly American: Houses and Interiors by Hendricks Churchill and A Mood, A Thought, A Feeling: Interiors by Young Huh
- Cullman & Kravis: Interiors, Nicole Hollis: Artistry of Home, and Michael S. Smith’s Classic by Design
- Featured Projects
- East Shore, Seattle, Washington by Kylee Shintaffer Design
- Apartment in Claudio Coello, Madrid by L.A. Studio Interiorismo
- The Apthorp by 2Michaels
- Houston Mid-Century by Jamie Bush+ Co.
- Sag Harbor by David Scott
- Park Avenue Aerie by William McIntosh Design
- Sculptural Moderns by Kendell Wilkinson Design
- Noho Loft by Frampton Co
- Greenwich, CT by Mark Cunningham Inc
- West End Avenue by Mendelson Group
- View All Interior Designers
-
MAGAZINE
- Featured Articles
- Northern Lights: Lighting the Scandinavian Way
- Milo Baughman: The Father of California Modern Design
- A Chandelier of Rare Provenance
- The Evergreen Allure of Gustavian Style
- Every Picture Tells a Story: Fine Art Photography
- Vive La France: Mid-Century French Design
- The Timeless Elegance of Barovier & Toso
- Paavo Tynell: The Art of Radical Simplicity
- The Magic of Mid-Century American Design
- Max Ingrand: The Power of Light and Control
- The Maverick Genius of Philip & Kelvin LaVerne
- 10 Pioneers of Modern Scandinavian Design
- The Untamed Genius of Paul Evans
- Pablo Picasso’s Enduring Legacy
- Karl Springer: Maximalist Minimalism
- See all Articles
Thomsen Gallery
Member of the following market(s):
New York City
Thomsen gallery, located in a townhouse on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, offers important Japanese paintings and works of art to collectors and museums worldwide. The gallery specializes in Japanese screens and scrolls; in early Japanese tea ceramics from the medieval through the Edo periods; in masterpieces of ikebana bamboo baskets; and in gold lacquer objects. It further specializes in post-war ink art and Gutai art as well as contemporary art by select artists, such as the internationally renowned Japanese ceramic artist Sueharu Fukami and paper artist Kyoko Ibe.
The gallery is owned by Erik and Cornelia Thomsen, who live and work in New York. Erik has been a dealer in Japanese art since 1981; born to Danish parents and raised in Japan, he is fluent in Japanese and was the first foreigner to apprentice to an art dealer in Japan. They have three children, Julia, Anna, and Georg.
There are no happenings yet.