Denmark is considering whether high-level cooking should be recognized as art, a proposal influenced by Copenhagen’s innovative restaurant scene and announced by Culture Minister Jakob Engel-Schmidt in January 2026. The discussion emerged as Danish chef Rasmus Munk continues to attract international attention through experimental dining events at the Alchemist restaurant in Copenhagen. Opened in 2019 in a former harbor district, the establishment gained global recognition and ranked among the world’s best restaurants in 2025. Munk’s elaborate presentations combine performance, projections, and unusual dishes designed to create an immersive culinary event rather than a traditional meal. Officials began exploring the proposal partly because Denmark’s modern food culture has grown in global ascendancy since the early 2000s, when pioneering restaurants introduced the influential New Nordic approach emphasizing seasonal Nordic ingredients and creative experimentation.

The proposal would require Denmark’s parliament to vote on whether gastronomy should be formally recognized as an artistic discipline rather than solely a craft. Supporters believe such recognition would represent a milestone for culinary innovation and could allow chefs to apply for cultural grants similar to those available to painters, writers, and musicians. Advocates argue that elaborate restaurant experiences already combine storytelling, visual design, and sensory exploration in ways comparable to traditional art forms. Critics, however, caution that cooking primarily serves nourishment and therefore differs fundamentally from artistic expression. Some cultural commentators also warn that public funding for chefs could compete with resources already allocated to established artists. The government has not yet confirmed a timeline for legislation, and the proposal remains under review while policymakers debate whether to reclassify elite culinary practice as art.