Homo Faber NextGen - 2024 - Homo Faber Fellowship - SELECTION
Discover the duos selected to take part in the new edition of the unique professional integration programme, supported by long-term partner Jaeger-LeCoultre
Following the success of the first edition, the Michelangelo Foundation for Creativity and Craftsmanship is delighted to share the names of the 24 selected duos who will participate in Homo Faber Fellowship 2024/25.
Broadening its horizons from the inaugural Fellowship, among the 24 selected duos practising 18 different crafts, 14 are international pairings with fellows coming from as far away as Colombia, Mexico, and Uruguay. The second edition brings with it an array of new crafts: blacksmithing, bookbinding, embroidery, felting, glass blowing, lace making, leatherworking, puppet making, tapestry weaving, and wood carving. From the 123 applications, the selection jury looked for artisans who need to pass on their craft know-how and fellows from diverse creative backgrounds and countries who demonstrate passion, talent and enthusiasm.
This edition welcomes a British duo practising the endangered craft of puppet making, a father-and-son duo in Spain seeking to protect a local and family heritage of bookbinding, a Norwegian duo upcycling wood from their region, same age duos; and numerous multi-national duos: from an Italian and Japanese duo based in London to a Swedish and Moroccan duo based in Portugal.
A unique professional integration programme
The seven-month Fellowship developed with partners from the Foundation’s network and supported by long-term partner Jaeger-LeCoultre, includes a one-month creative and entrepreneurial masterclass developed and certified by ESSEC Business School and Passa Ao Futuro at the International University of Art in Venice and a six-month placement in a master artisan’s workshop in Europe, culminating in a co-creation project for each duo. The life-changing programme facilitates the transmission of craft knowledge and skills from one generation to the next, helping talented young artisans take their first steps towards a career in craft.
Thanks to new partnerships with like-minded organisations, the Michelangelo Foundation has expanded the programme to four new countries: Cyprus, Poland, Norway and the United Kingdom. Master artisans will welcome fellows in these countries, as well as in the five countries which participated in the first edition: France, Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain.
A masterclass during Homo Faber 2024: The Journey of Life
The 24 fellows will come together from 2 to 27 September to take part in a creative and entrepreneurial masterclass at the International University of Art in Venice just around the corner from the Foundation’s month-long biennial celebration of contemporary craftsmanship, Homo Faber 2024. The fellows will benefit from seeing the inspiring works of internationally acclaimed craftspeople and meeting some of the Foundation’s craft community. Specialised workshops on design thinking, object planning, external site visits to the studios of Venetian master artisans and more will make the masterclass an enriching experience, equipping the fellows with essential skills. From 26 to 27 September, the participating master artisans will join the fellows for unique workshops prior to the individual placements commencing in October.
The 24 duos of master artisans and fellows selected for the second edition of Homo Faber Fellowship are:
CYPRUS
Woodworking: Navid Gholipour, Iranian & Natali Touloupou, Australian/Cypriot
FRANCE
Felting: Laurine Malengreau, Belgian & Emma Fardeau
Glassblowing: Eve George & Alexandra Holmes, British
Leatherworking: Pierre Roux & Cristina Alvarez Matallana, Colombian
Textile creation : Cecile Feilchenfeldt, Swiss & Karla Huff, German
Wood marquetry: Pierre-Henri Beyssac & Victoire Camus
GREECE
Ceramics: Vanessa Anastasopoulou & Aikaterini Sara Batistatou
Textile dyeing: Christiana Vardakou & Paolina Bumeder, German
Weaving: Maria Stavropoulou & Ella Solberg, Norwegian
IRELAND
Blacksmithing: James O'Riordan & Michal Halvoník, Czech
Lacemaking: Fiona Harrington & Jack O' Meara
Stone carving: Helen O'Connell & Finn Conlon
NORWAY
Basket weaving: Liss Mona Wammer-Pettersen & Coline Bouquin, French
Ceramics: Ole Morten Rokvam & Line Blom Salvesen
Woodworking: Stian Korntved Ruud & Marianne Bain
POLAND
Embroidery: Alicja Stańska & Alicja Kozłowska
PORTUGAL
Ceramics: Anna Westerlund, Swedish & Dounia Tabti, Moroccan
Tapestry weaving: Célia Esteves & Erica Monteiro
SPAIN
Bookbinding: Luis Mínguez Serrano & Gonzalo Mínguez Mínguez
Embroidery: Encarnación Berrio López & Anastacia Juana Gómez González, Mexican
Wood sculpting: Víctor García Villalgordo & Juan Manuel Juárez Cabello
Woodworking: Francisco Luis Martos Sánchez & Florencia Iracema Olivera Mutuberria, Uruguayan
UNITED KINGDOM
Bookbinding: Manuel Mazzotti, Italian & Chihiro Shigemitsu, Japanese
Puppet making: Oliver Hymans & Ash Appadu
@homofaber
Homo Faber Fellowship is a 7-month sponsored professional integration programme designed for duos of master artisans and craft graduates, proposed by Homo Faber NextGen. The second edition begins for the fellows in September 2024 with a one-month creative and entrepreneurial masterclass taught by ESSEC Business School and Passa Ao Futuro at the International University of Art in Venice. The participating fellows will then spend six months in the workshops of their paired master artisans across Europe. During these months spent in the workshop together, the 24 duos will be challenged to design and handcraft a co-creation inspired by a theme chosen by the programme’s supporting partner Jaeger-LeCoultre. The Fellowship is developed in partnership with local members of the Foundation’s network. homofaber.com
The Michelangelo Foundation for Creativity and Craftsmanship is a non-profit institution based in Geneva, which champions contemporary craftspeople worldwide with the aim of promoting a more human, inclusive and sustainable future. The Foundation seeks to highlight the connections between craft and the wider arts and the design world. Its mission is to both celebrate and preserve craftsmanship and its diversity of makers, materials and techniques, by increasing craft’s everyday recognition and its viability as a professional path for the next generations. The Foundation presents Homo Faber, a cultural movement centred on creative artisans worldwide. Its signature projects are education programmes for the next generations, an international biennial celebration and an online guide. homofaber.com
Supporting partner of Homo Faber Fellowship:
Jaeger-LeCoultre: The Watchmaker of Watchmakers™
Since 1833, driven by an unquenchable thirst for innovation and creativity, and inspired by the peaceful natural surroundings of its home in the Vallée de Joux, Jaeger-LeCoultre has been distinguished by its mastery of complications and the precision of its mechanisms. Known as the Watchmaker of Watchmakers™, the Manufacture has expressed its relentlessly inventive spirit through the creation of more than 1,400 different calibres and the award of more than 430 patents. Harnessing 190 years of accumulated expertise, La Grande Maison’s watchmakers design, produce, finish and ornament the most advanced and precise mechanisms, blending passion with centuries-old savoir-faire, linking the past to the future, timeless but always up with the times. With 180 skills brought together under one roof, the Manufacture creates fine timepieces that combine technical ingenuity with aesthetic beauty and a distinctively understated sophistication.jaeger-lecoultre.com
Institutional partners:
Asociación Contemporanea de Artes y Oficios (ACAO) is an association that promotes both traditional and contemporary Spanish crafts. They seek to protect Spanish craftsmanship, and use it to foster the development of culture, history and art and boost its economic benefits on the environment and tourism industry. Their main targets are to ensure an environment in which Spanish craftspeople can thrive and to aid them in having further commercial reach in Spain and internationally espanaartesana.com
The B&M Theocharakis Foundation for the Fine Arts and Music aims to encourage the public to enter into a wide-ranging and interdisciplinary dialogue with music and the visual arts. Founded in 2004, this non-profit organisation promotes the work of Greek artists at home and abroad, with support for networking, and maintains a directory of artisans. The foundation sponsors educational and academic research, and its cultural centre in the heart of Athens hosts exhibitions, concerts, lectures and educational activities as well as a café and art shop. thf.gr
Established in 1986, the Centro de Formação Profissional para o Artesanato e Património (CEARTE), is a vocational training centre in the craft sector, with its headquarters based in Coimbra. CEARTE masterminds training projects all over Portugal, supporting creativity, skills and talent development. Respecting and upholding time-honoured techniques and heritage skills, the organisation also places a focus on restoration and patrimony, as well as innovation. cearte.pt
The Cyprus Handicraft Service (CHS) is the Republic of Cyprus governmental body under the Deputy Ministry of Culture, responsible for promoting and preserving the rich heritage of Cypriot craftsmanship while enhancing its competitiveness through research and design innovation. The CHS designs and implements policies, to ensure that the local know-how in craft making will be preserved and passed on to the new generation of artisans. cyprushandicraft.gov.cy
Design & Crafts Council Ireland is the national agency for craft and design in Ireland, we support designers and makers to develop their businesses in a sustainable way, and advocate for the societal benefits of craft and design. DCCI's activities are funded by the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment via Enterprise Ireland. DCCI currently has 64 member organisations and over 3,500 registered clients. dcci.ie
Institut pour les Savoir-Faire Français (The French Savoir-Faire Institute) is a non-profit association founded in 1889. Their work is recognized by the French Ministry of Economics, Finance and Industrial and Digital Sovereignty, the French Ministry of Culture, and the French Ministry of National Education, and Youth. They conduct a support policy for fine crafts as well as Living Heritage Companies. The Institute actively participates in the promotion of French savoir-faire at national and international levels institut-savoirfaire.fr
The Norwegian Folk Art and Craft Association is a non-governmental organization that has over 350 local member groups across Norway. Since its inception in 1910, the association has been steadfast in its mission to champion traditional Norwegian handicrafts, perpetuate craft skills, and spread the joy of creating. In 2014, it achieved UNESCO accreditation. A core aspect of their work involves teaching craft skills, with numerous courses offered by local member groups nationwide. husflid.no
Nów. New Craft Poland is an association of original craft studios from all over Poland. The unique pieces created by their members are of the highest quality of workmanship. Their objective is to spread knowledge about contemporary Polish craft and promote it at home and abroad. They represent the interests of their members while dealing with public institutions and business. nownowerzemioslo.pl
The Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Trust (QEST) is a charity that transforms the careers of talented and aspiring makers by funding their training and education, creating pathways to excellence and strengthening the future of the UK’s craft sector. To date, QEST has awarded more than £6million to almost 800 individuals working across the UK in 130 different craft disciplines. While their Crafting Tomorrow programme inspires a new generation of makers through key partnerships. qest.org.uk
Academic partners:
ESSEC Business School, founded in 1907, is one of the world’s top management schools and holds the “triple crown” accreditation from EQUIS, AACSB and AMBA. With 7,221 students; a faculty comprised of 169 full-time professors, 23 of which are emeritus professors, in France and Singapore, recognized for both the quality and influence of their research; a wide range of management training programmes; partnerships with the world’s best universities; and a network of 65,000 alumni, ESSEC continues to foster a tradition of academic excellence and a spirit of openness in the fields of economics, social sciences and innovation. In 2005, ESSEC opened a campus in Asia. ESSEC’s operations in Asia Pacific, strategically located in Singapore, present the perfect foothold for ESSEC to be part of the vibrant growth of Asia and to bring its expertise to the expanding region. Additionally, in 2017 ESSEC opened a new campus in Rabat, Morocco. ESSEC’s international expansion allows students and professors to study and understand the economic forces at work in the different regions of the world. essec.edu
Passa Ao Futuro founded in 2016 by Astrid Suzano and Fatima Durkee, is a cultural initiative non-profit association that seeks out craftspeople in Portugal working with traditional techniques. It strives to support these communities and people through the documentation and preservation of their tacit knowledge, the development of case specific social, environmental and economic sustainability programmes, with a focus on the celebration and passing on of skills. The association activates this network through several initiatives including residencies, summer schools, exhibitions, social innovation and sustainability training. It supports the crafts as a catalyst for a regenerative future. passaaofuturo.com
Creative residency:
Since 1969, UIA Università Internazionale dell’Arte (International University of Art), located at Villa Hériot, is the most prestigious professional training centre in the field of cultural heritage restoration and conservation in Venice. Since its foundation, UIA has been a point of reference for education and training in the field of art, and a place of experimentation between the world of academia and the world of work. uiavenezia.com
Homo Faber NextGen - 2024 - Homo Faber Fellowship
September 2024
Homo Faber NextGen - 2024 - Homo Faber Fellowship
September 2024
Homo Faber NextGen - 2024 - Homo Faber Fellowship
September 2024