PREZIOSA YOUNG 2024-25 WINNERS
We are proud to announce the names of the selected
artists for the 2024-2025 edition of the
international contest PREZIOSA YOUNG
Exhibition schedule
The winners’ exhibition will be presented during the
MIDA 2025
MIDA 2025, (Mostra Internazionale dell’Artigianato) event, taking place in Florence from April 25th to May 1st, 2025, in the Polveriera pavilion, a space entirely dedicated to LAO.
ORATORIO SAN ROCCO IN PADUA
Preziosa Young 2024 will then be hosted in the
ORATORIO SAN ROCCO IN PADUA
ROMA JEWELRY WEEK
A selection of the works will find a place in the
ROMA JEWELRY WEEK
Other venues are yet to be determined
Jury
- Giò Carbone
Founder and director, Le Arti Orafe. Founder and coordinator, PREZIOSA – Florence, Jewellery Week PROJECT - Alice Rendon
Art Historian, Florence; - Maria Laura La Mantia
Jewellery Historian, Caserta and Florence; - Doreen Timmers
Doors Gallery, Mariaheide, the Netherlands; - Bryna Pomp
Director, MAD About Jewelry, Museum of arts and design, New York; - Monica Cecchini
Architect, founder of Roma Jewelry Week, designer, art curator and director of Incinque Open Art Monti gallery;
- Eliana Negroni
Curator of Archivio Negroni, AGC Italian association for contemporary jewellery Board member; - Laura Astrologo Porché
Jewellery & Watches Journalist; - Laura Helena Aureli
Founder & creative director Lost In Jewellery Magazine; - Irina Probst
Exhibition Manager, INHORGENTA Munich; - Charlotte Vanhoubroek
Jewellery artist, selected for the 2021 edition of PREZIOSA YOUNG, and winner of the LAO special Prize.
The winners are
special mentions
Received special mentions for juror appreciation, but did not garner enough preferences to be shortlisted for this edition. These participants may however be eligible for the special prizes offered by the project partners.
Special prizes awarded by the competition partners
Inhorgenta Special Prize:
YeJin ChoiÂ
has been awarded a complimentary exhibition space at the 2026 edition of the fair.
Journal des Bijoux Special Prize:
Mark Newman
has been awarded the special prize by Laura Astrologo Porché.
Laura Helena Aureli Special Prizes:Â
Benedict Haener and YeJin Choi
 have each been awarded a special prize by Laura Helena Aureli, founder and creative director of Lost In Jewellery Magazine
Margo Csipő
Margo Csipő
As a metalsmith, sculptor, illustrator, and poet, my practice explores jewelry and masks as vessels for meaning to be emptied and filled by the creator and wearer both physically and metaphorically.
The scrimshaw illustrations in my work question what makes an image specific or universal, what is understood and what is alien. My relationship to these images is built through my drawing and poetry- writing practices. These writings unearth the depths of visual metaphor that I work with to express my joy and frustration at the unknowns of my reality. Cups, hands, insects, rocks, mazes, and drips suggest something held or acts of gain and loss. Processing time and growth through these sequential images, I attempt to understand my own myth in flux.
Images are engraved on mother of pearl, bone and amber or chased in silver. These small vignettes are then riveted or set like stones on intensely fabricated linkages. The materials must be soft enough to engrave, but hard enough to be worn and hold the ink that is rubbed into the designs. Just as these images are held in the matrixes of pearl, bone, and amber–the wearer and creator hold the meanings of these images in the matrixes of themselves. The resulting objects are intimate and precious, illustrated on front and back to entice the wearer and viewer into further examination.
Mesh structures take the appearance of armor linkages, but their designs directly reference Whiting Davis evening bags, another mechanism of holding. Taking the forms of neckpieces, masks, and brooches–the gentle drapery holds the wearer with comfortable weight and makes them into another vessel of meaning in the linkage. Structure, repetition and connectivity build the relationships between illustrations, animating tales of the unknown on the body.
Yasmin Zehavi
Yasmin Zehavi
My artistic practice draws profound inspiration from prehistoric jewelry and shells, which were worn, buried, and discovered intertwined with their owners. These organic pieces, fused with human skeletons, create a new kind of anatomy where jewelry becomes an intrinsic part of the wearer’s life story. Each piece serves as an eternal biography, evoking empathy and connection with individuals from millennia ago, and standing as a testament to the society in which it was created.
In my work, I simulate invented organic remnants, blending forms from the human body. Jewelry is portrayed as a fossil, surviving tens of thousands of years and documenting its era. This exploration delves into how jewelry communicates with the future and serves as a tool for understanding the past, allowing the jeweler to influence historical narratives. My pieces are constructed as hollow layers, reminiscent of archaeological excavation layers, emphasizing the depth and complexity of historical discovery.
I work with pure silver, an eternal material, to express the jeweler’s role in preserving human connections across millennia. My technique aims to produce no material waste, utilizing whole silver sheets with traditional methods of cutting and soldering, deliberately avoiding actions that generate waste. This sustainable approach echoes the timeless and enduring nature of the artifacts that inspire my art, capturing a sense of movement frozen in time, akin to an organic fossil.
YeJin Choi
YeJin Choi
Plants serve as a medium of communication, and among them, flowers are symbols that convey deeper, implicit meanings.
Just as flowers are given as gifts to celebrate occasions like birthdays and weddings, they offer us emotional comfort and happiness.
Blooming refers to the moment a flower opens, which occurs only after various conditions such as water, sunlight, and nutrients are fulfilled. This is when the flower reaches its full potential, its vitality
at its peak. A fully bloomed flower is the result of the continuous life processes within it, and through this, we can experience the vibrancy of life. The liveliness expressed by the flower evokes feelings of happiness, psychological healing, and a sense of stability.
Shrinkles is a type of plastic that can be used to draw pictures like on paper, using various coloring tools such as colored pencils. When heated, this material shrinks—up to about one-seventh of its original size causing the drawing to become more intricate and delicate. The way it changes shape as it shrinks feels like watching the rapid growth process of a plant. By transforming the image of flowers into jewelry, I aim to provide a source of emotional comfort, offering a moment of peace and solace.
I create a metal frame using wax casting, and then assemble flower petals made from Shrinkles to complete the artwork.
The design typically repeats a single shape, and depending on the direction of the repetition, the piece gives the impression of either rising or expanding.
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