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Rolex | Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative


El Anatsui and Bronwyn Katz

At a ceremony at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in New York, Rolex announced the names of the five renowned international artists who will participate in the new cycle of the Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative. They will each mentor a promising emerging artist for two years.

Created in 2002 to foster the transmission of skills and knowledge from one generation to the next in the arts, the Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative embodies the watchmaker’s constant pursuit of excellence, a philosophy symbolised by the term “Perpetual”.

For the 2023-2024 programme, five internationally renowned artists – El Anatsui (visual arts), Bernardine Evaristo (literature), Jia Zhang-Ke (film), Anne Lacaton (architecture) and Dianne Reeves (music) – will mentor promising talents they have selected. They will spend two years of creative collaboration, as it is over time that artistic sense can be passed on from generation to generation.

Visual Arts: El Anatsui and Bronwyn Katz
Ghanaian artist El Anatsui has helped redefine the global art world with Africa’s presence, raising its profile through his monumental sculptures and installations that move across painting, textiles, sculpture and design to encompass the use of water, wind, wood, clay, stone, metal, printing plates, aluminium bottle tops and other found materials. His protégée, the Cape Town-based South African Bronwyn Katz, has similarly incorporated sculpture, installation, video and performance in her acclaimed, nuanced body of work that uses found natural materials such as iron ore, or salvaged manufactured objects including foam mattresses and bed springs.

Literature: Bernardine Evaristo and Ayesha Harruna Attah
Bernardine Evaristo, who in 2019 became the first black woman and the first black British person to win the prestigious Booker Prize for her novel, Girl, Woman, Other, is the author of 10 books that explore the African diaspora and numerous other works of short fiction, poetry, drama, essays and journalism. Her protégée, Ayesha Harruna Attah, is part of a new generation of African writers who are making their name in literary circles. The Senegal-based Ghanaian author has published five novels: Harmattan Rain (2009), Saturday’s Shadows (2015), The Hundred Wells of Salaga (2018), The Deep Blue Between (2020) and Zainab Takes New York (2022) that challenge existing preconceptions of African mores through her vibrant storytelling.

Film: Jia Zhang-Ke and Rafael Manuel
Considered one of the most daring Chinese filmmakers working today, Jia Zhang-Ke has become a leading figure in the post-1990 “Sixth Generation” of Chinese directors. His early films, known as the Shanxi trilogy, caught moments of transition in Chinese society. He has since garnered a string of top awards, including the Golden Lion at the 2006 Venice Film Festival. Jia Zhang-Ke’s protégé, the award-winning Filipino filmmaker Rafael Manuel, has grounded his creations in the study of philosophy and visual communications. Manuel is currently working on his first two feature films: Filipiñana (based on his short of that name) and Patrimonio.

Architecture: Anne Lacaton and Arine Aprahamian
Named a Laureate of the 2021 Pritzker Architecture Prize, Anne Lacaton of Lacaton & Vassal is recognised internationally for designs that maximise the discipline’s human and environmental potential and make sustainable use of what already exists. Her protégée, the Lebanese-Armenian architect, designer and researcher Arine Aprahamian, also champions an innovative, affordable and sustainable vision of the future through architecture as evident in the cutting-edge buildings and projects she and her studio Müller Aprahamian have designed in Beirut, London and Yerevan, Armenia.

Music: Dianne Reeves and Song Yi Jeon
Recognised for her breathtaking virtuosity, improvisational prowess and unique jazz and R&B stylings, five-time Grammy winner Dianne Reeves is considered the world’s pre-eminent jazz vocalist. Her most recent album, Beautiful Life, received the Grammy for Best Jazz Vocal Performance and she won the same award previously for three consecutive recordings. Reeves’s protégée, Song Yi Jeon, the South Korean modern jazz singer and composer who developed her unique sound at Boston’s famed Berklee College of Music in the US, is known for her hypnotic voice that is likened to a malleable wordless instrument, as well as for her incomparable improvisations. In 2018, Jeon released her first album, Movement of Lives.

Since its inception, the Mentoring Programme has brought together 63 duos of prestigious artists and young talents from around the world.

Former Rolex protégés have been appointed as artistic directors of major theatre companies and have had their work presented at leading international exhibitions such as the Venice Art Biennale and the International Architecture Exhibition. A literature protégée in 2010–2011, Tracy K. Smith, served as Poet Laureate of the United States from 2017–2019.

Published on 2022-10-14