Meet the Finalists of the Loewe Foundation Craft Prize 2026
The 30 honorees were chosen by a panel of experts from over 5,100 submissions by artisans representing 133 countries and regions
The Loewe Foundation has announced the shortlist for its highly anticipated 2026 Craft Prize, selecting 30 artists from 19 countries and regions in disciplines including ceramics, jewelry, glass, woodwork, bookbinding, furniture, and more. The honorees will present their works at the National Gallery Singapore from May 13 until June 14, with the jury-selected winner, who will receive a €50,000 award, and two special mentions to be announced on May 12.
“The Craft Prize continues to reveal the extraordinary diversity and ambition of contemporary craft,” says Sheila Loewe, President of the Loewe Foundation. “The works shortlisted for the 2026 edition demonstrate how deeply rooted traditions can be reimagined through innovation, skill, and imagination. Bringing this exhibition to Singapore reflects the global dialogue at the heart of the Prize and our ongoing commitment to supporting artists at pivotal moments in their careers.”
New this year, the foundation is introducing an initiative to support past honorees through a partnership with Belmond, which will produce three two-month residencies at La Residencia in Mallorca. The residencies at the Belmond Hotel property will see artists create new artwork in dialogue with Spain’s cultural landscape.
“The ninth edition of the Loewe Foundation Craft Prize reflects a broad and nuanced understanding of contemporary craft, bringing together works that expand tradition through risk, skill, and imagination,” says Anatxu Zabalbeascoa, Executive Secretary of the Foundation’s Craft Prize Expert Panel. “The selection highlights how craft today moves fluidly between art and making, combining cultural perspectives, technological and pre-technological knowledge, and diverse approaches to material and form.”
The annual award, which was founded in 2016, pays tribute to the Spanish luxury house’s origins as a collective craft workshop dating back to 1846. Japanese ceramist Kunimasa Aoki was selected as last year’s winner and will join this year’s jury.
See below for the full list of the 2026 honorees:
Baba Tree Master Weavers × Álvaro Catalán de Ocón (Spain) Jobe Burns (United Kingdom)
Soohyun Chou (Republic of Korea)
Morten Løbner Espersen (Denmark)
Liam Fleming (Australia)
Oskar Gustafsson (Sweden)
Susan Halls (United Kingdom)
Gjertrud Hals (Norway)
Chia-Chen Hsieh (Taiwan Region)
Adelene Koh (Singapore)
Maria Koshenkova (Denmark)
Jong In Lee (Republic of Korea)
Somyeong Lee (Republic of Korea)
Misako Nakahira (Japan)
Fadekemi Ogunsanya (Nigeria)
Jieun Park (Republic of Korea)
Jongjin Park (Republic of Korea)
Rafael Pérez Fernández (Spain)
Dorothea Prühl (Germany)
Kirstie Rea (Australia)
Vivi Rosa (Brazil)
Hervé Sabin (Haiti)
Xanthe Somers (Zimbabwe)
Coco Sung (Republic of Korea)
Nobuyuki Tanaka (Japan)
Graziano Visintin (Italy)
Rayah Wauters (Belgium)
Nan Wei (China) Jane Yang-D’Haene (United States of America) Ayano Yoshizumi (Japan)