Index – Culture – Ten young women were locked up for a month



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The Lajos Kozma Crafts and Applied Arts Scholars 2019 Fellows will be featured in an unusual online exhibition. The Kozma’19 exhibition in had to be postponed due to a coronavirus epidemic, but now anyone on the World Wide Web until March 17 can see where and where the Hungarian applied arts is headed.

The Lajos Kozma Craft Scholarship has been providing professional and financial support to young artisans since 1987, who can focus exclusively on creation during the scholarship year.

  • Petra Dénes is working on a project called Kauchukka in the name of recycling and sustainability: she produces public soles from leather waste for her own designer footwear.

  • Edina Andrási’s lamps are functional objects, but we can also look at them as sculptures. Made from a mix of porcelain and paper, they are both organic and futuristic.
  • Gspann Zsuzsa’s handbag collection called Bambou is made of naturally degradable bamboo plywood, the pieces can also be used with leather accessories.
  • Sarolt Szilágyi’s works are based on inspirations from fine arts and art history. His icons of the 21st century transform today’s celebrities into Byzantine icons, sacred images.
  • Tünde Ruzicska’s Genius loci series: The spirit of the place consists of small sculptures, the sculptures are completed only in the spirit of the spirit of the place and can be interpreted in the knowledge of it.
  • Zalafia Zala’s collection of objects was created in the spirit of environmental awareness: it used a material of which there is almost infinite availability: garbage.
  • Ninetta Németh has developed a biodegradable and environmentally friendly alternative to plastic shopping bags: a bag of kombucha mushrooms.
  • Herter’s Kata Radicalis series consists of pots that work organically with plants, formally complement them and also meet the needs of plants.
  • In her collection of clothes, Dora Kelemen, called Symbiosis, worked with geometrically patterned surfaces, placing various materials between the woven layers, such as a crinoline cylinder.
  • Nóra Tengely’s jewelry presents the problem of the occupation of stone, with her works she strives to achieve the balance between the enveloping shape and the stone.

The Kozma’19 exhibition is open until March 17, 2021.



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