Audo Copenhagen's (Formerly known as Menu) philosophy is simple.
We want to make the world better, less complicated, a little bit nicer to wake up to. Collaborating with super-talented designers, we make objects to be treasured now and forever. We work with some of the most exciting and driven creative individuals from the worlds of architecture and design to produce high quality design with a crisp Scandinavian look.
At Menu we are obsessed with clever solutions for modern living. We want to make beautiful objects for everyday use, whether that's an indispensable item of kitchen equipment, a clever floating shelf, or a beautiful vase that adds the finishing touch to your living space. Wherever we can, we work locally with craftspeople around the world, preserving skills while creating the best modern design.
Well-proportioned and well designed, the Elizabeth Lounge Chair profiles a majestic elegance that underpins its royal name. Originally called the Model U56, it was later dubbed Elizabeth Chair after Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip purchased two of them during an official visit to Denmark in 1958. The chair's sculpted armrests combined with the leather-upholstered low seat and sleigh-like back make it a prime example of Danish Modern.
An elegant masterpiece by the husband-and-wife designer duo Tove and Edvard Kindt-Larsen, the Pagoda Sofa is unknown to most. Avantgarde and artistic for its time, its low, almost flat, armrests and beautiful V-shaped legs make it light and precise in its design language – and give the sofa a contemporary look.
A small and unassuming sketch with a timeless design that speaks to any age and period – introducing the new Klampenborg table lamp by Mogens Lassen that by Lassen now launches for the first time. The lamp has not previously been in production but remained simply a line on a yellowed sheet of paper in the Lassen brothers’ achieve at the Danish National Art Library in Copenhagen.
Designed in the 1950s by Alf Svensson and Yngvar Sandström, Resonant is as relevant today as ever. The mid-century pendant lamp is both striking and simple, shaped from polished brass into four concentric shades that direct glare-free light downwards. Well suited to any space, its name alludes to a visual interplay between light and sound, reflecting off the shiny surface and reverberating across a room.
Imagined by the industrious Swedish furniture designer Alf Svensson in the 1950s, Chandelier 3 is one of three lighting designs in the Collector series. Shaped from a central band of solid brass, six conical metal shades direct the light upwards and downwards to illuminate with ambient light.
Imagined by the industrious Swedish furniture designer Alf Svensson in the 1950s, Chandelier 3 is one of three lighting designs in the Collector series. Shaped from a central band of solid brass, six conical metal shades direct the light upwards and downwards to illuminate with ambient light.