Jump to content

Premio Faenza

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Premio Faenza
Awarded forcontemporary ceramic art
Date1938 (1938)
LocationFaenza
CountryItaly
Presented byMuseo Internazionale delle Ceramiche
Winners
Full list of recipients[1]
  • 1938: Pietro Melandri [it]
  • 1939: Pietro Melandri
  • 1941: Emilio Casadio and Carlo Corvi
  • 1942: Giuseppe Mazzullo
  • 1946: Angelo Biancini and Anselmo Bucci
  • 1949: Anselmo Bucci, Guido Gambone ex aequo
  • 1952: Antonio Scordia and Guerrino Tramonti
  • 1953: Salvatore Meli, Carlo Zauli ex aequo
  • 1954: Leoncillo Leonardi
  • 1955: Carlo Negri, Guerrino Tramonti ex aequo
  • 1956: Germano Belletti, Gian Battista Valentini ex aequo
  • 1957: Angelo Biancini
  • 1958: Carlo Zauli
  • 1959: Guido Gambone
  • 1960: Guido Gambone
  • 1961: Gian Battista Valentini
  • 1962: Carlo Zauli
  • 1963: Fulvio Ravaioli, Pompeo Pianezzola ex aequo
  • 1964:Leoncillo Leonardi, Rogier Vandeweghe [nl] ex aequo
  • 1965: Berndt Friberg
  • 1966: Wilhelm and Elly Kuch
  • 1967: Eduard Chapallaz
  • 1968: Hilkka Liisa Ahola
  • 1969: Vlastimil Květenský
  • 1970: Goffredo Gaeta, Ivo Sassi ex aequo
  • 1971: Panos Tsolakos
  • 1972: Yasuo Hayashi
  • 1973: Wilhelm and Elly Kuch
  • 1974: Georges Blom
  • 1975: Colin Pearson
  • 1976: Alfonso Leoni, Paul Donhauser ex aequo
  • 1977: Gian Battista Valentini
  • 1978: Mirko Orlandini
  • 1979: Maria Teresa Kuczynska
  • 1980: Guido Mariani
  • 1981: Michel Kuipers
  • 1982: Aki Matsui Toshio
  • 1983: Jo-Anne Caron Devroey, Emidio Galassi ex aequo
  • 1984: Giuseppe Lucietti
  • 1985: Sueharu Fukami
  • 1986: (no award)
  • 1987: Franz Stähler
  • 1989: Enrico Stropparo
  • 1991: Svetlana Nikolaevna Pasechnaya
  • 1993: Tjok Dessauvage, Aldo Rontini ex aequo
  • 1995: Ken Eastman
  • 1997: Michael Cleff
  • 1999: Torbjørn Kvasbø
  • 2001: Ana Cecilia Hillar
  • 2003: Jun Nishida
  • 2005: Silvia Zotta, Tomoko Kawakami ex aequo
  • 2007: Simone Lucietti, Ian Mcdonald ex aequo
  • 2009: Tomonari Kato, Andrea Salvatori ex aequo
  • 2011: Shigeki Hayashi, Eri Dewa, Giovanni Ruggiero ex aequo
  • 2013: Päivi Rintaniemi [fi], Alessandro Neretti
  • 2015: Silvia Celeste Calcagno, Helene Kirchmair, Thomas Stollar ex aequo
Websitemicfaenza.org

The Premio Faenza is an international prize for contemporary ceramic art. It is awarded by the Museo Internazionale delle Ceramiche in Faenza, in Emilia-Romagna in northern Italy, and is the principal Italian prize of its kind.[2]: 47 

History

[edit]

The prize was established in 1931. In 1938 it became an annual national award and was named "Premio Faenza".[3]: 48  The first recipient of the Premio Faenza was Pietro Melandri [it], who also won it in the following year.[4]: 284  The award was not made in some years of the Second World War, and recommenced in 1946. In 1963 it became international in scope – although several foreign artists had already been invited to participate in earlier editions – and from 1989 it became a biennial award.[3]: 48 [4]: 284 

Recipients

[edit]

Among the recipients of the award are the sculptors Angelo Biancini (1946, 1957), Leoncillo Leonardi (1954, 1964) and Carlo Zauli [it] (1953, 1958 and 1962),[5]: 17  and the ceramic artists Sueharu Fukami (1985) and Ken Eastman (1995).[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Albo d'oro del "Premio Faenza" (in Italian). Museo Internazionale delle Ceramiche in Faenza. Accessed February 2018.
  2. ^ Ennio Golfieri (1977). L'arte a Faenza dal neoclassicismo ai nostri giorni, Part 2 (in Italian). Faenza: Amministrazione Comunale.
  3. ^ a b Cristiana Baietta (2001). Le città della ceramica (in Italian). Milano: Touring Club Italiano. ISBN 9788836523641.
  4. ^ a b Aldo Cairola, Angela Cipriani (1981). Ceramica italiana dalle origini a oggi (in Italian). Roma: Editalia. ISBN 9788870600131.
  5. ^ Rolando Giovannini, Lori-Ann Touchette (2016). Ceramics That Change. Ceramics: Art & Perception (103): 16–19. (subscription required).