Ten young IED designers from international origin will present their thesis projects for a joint reflection on the significance of establishing links between October 15th and 19th
Date
17 October 2024
Ten young IED designers from international origin will present their thesis projects for a joint reflection on the significance of establishing links between October 15th and 19th
Ten recent graduates of the Bachelor's in Jewelry Design have collaborated on the realization of the exhibition Infinitesimal exhibited in via Sciesa 4 until 19 October.
Each of them brought their own cultural background from India to Russia, from the USA to Switzerland, from Belgium to Italy and their own personal themes but with some points of union such as the passion for jewelry design. The concept of the exhibition is explained by the designers themselves who focused on the value of meeting: ten people unknown to each other, from different parts of the world, met thanks to passions, similar intentions and the deep human need to understand the world.
The designers who participated are: Paola Cavallier with Closing the loop in which waste materials from her city Malgrate are valued, Els Op De Beeck with Bare a ritual of transformation that invites to expose feelings such as anxiety and loneliness, Giulia Calzaretti con Cura - The mechanism of understanding others an encounter of empathy and strength manifested by the union of silver and silk, Naishee Shah with Panacea in which we find the union of spirituality, faith and material symbolism through copper crystals, silver and aluminium, Mel Oceane Dario with Embryo a project that investigates the biological universe of seeds and humanity, Miryam Paparazzo with Kadov in polyhedral based on Shibuichi (Japanese alloy of copper and silver) and steel wires, Louis Frederick Kutyla with Exquisite corpse an investigation into the concept of deconstruction, Aleksandra Leroy with Istoki a collection made with thin copper wires that represent the future and hope, Mathew Clifson with The Seven Seals featuring an oxidized silver necklace and pearls, finally, Noor Kerdi with Patterns of the coral reef proposes a modular bracelet in rhodium-plated silver and synthetic spinel.