Design Academy Eindhoven (DAE)FAQInformation

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With Martine Rey
From 15/06/2026 to 19/06/2026

The training

Educational objectives:

Martine Rey, an artist specializing in urushi lacquer, teaches kintsugi, the art of repairing both physical and symbolic wounds, drawing on ancestral techniques. In Japan, lacquer is considered a prestigious art, an ornamental art that traditionally emphasizes the adornment of objects with the finesse of a goldsmith.

As a contemporary designer, Martine Rey quickly shifted this approach. Rather than creating objects where lacquer is merely a redundant or superfluous addition, she chooses objects with a story and seeks to transform our perception of them by applying lacquer. Her goal is to give lacquer its full value as a precious material. She sees it not as a simple means of protection or decoration, but as a substance that gives ordinary, anonymous, abandoned, and neglected objects the status of relics and talismans. Beneath the lacquer, these objects reveal themselves and uncover unsuspected depths.

For five days, she will introduce participants to this artistic craft and this natural lacquer with its incredible properties.

At the end of the training, the trainee will be able to:

  • Understand the added value of urushi lacquer
  • Understand the benefits of polymerization
  • Prepare broken pieces for sublimation
  • Repeat the steps dedicated to kintsugi
  • Apply metal powders
  • Apply finishing lacquers

Training content

Le kintsugi, art symbolisant la résilience et la beauté des cicatrices de la vie, transforme les lignes de faille en lignes de force. Signifiant littéralement « jointure en or » en japonais, le kintsugi consiste à restaurer des objets cassés ou abîmés non pas en dissimulant leurs fêlures, mais en les sublimant avec de l’or. Cet art célèbre l’imperfection et la fragilité, révélant la valeur unique de chaque marque de fracture.

À travers la technique de la laque, par son labeur, sa lenteur et sa préciosité, Martine Rey évoque les souvenirs des moments passés à observer sa mère raccommoder avec tendresse les vêtements des enfants. Elle se remémore le vent poussant les nuages, les instants passés à ramasser des cailloux qui déformaient ses poches.

Jour 1

Matin et après-midi

  • Journée de préparation
  • Historique sur le Kintsugi avec diaporama
  • Explications rapides des spécificités de la laque végétale « urushi » : de ses caractéristiques, spécificités de polymérisation (et non de séchage) à ses avantages
  • Préparation des KINTSUGI :
    Objets à recoller : choix du type de colle, évaluation du « re-montage » de la pièce blessée, évaluation de comblement lors de pièces manquantes (enduits, « rapiéçages » avec un autre morceau de céramique, ou de verre ou autre)
  • Collages des pièces cassées, premiers rebouchages des petits manques
  • Démonstrations de différents enduits à base de laque et de différentes charges
  • Travail sur le maximum des pièces sélectionnées pour observer le temps nécessaire de durcissement de la laque
    (Une pièce sera collée de façon synthétique afin de pouvoir passer aux étapes finales plus sûrement)

 

Jours 2 et 3

Matin et après-midi

  • Travail sur toutes les opérations dédiées au kintsugi et à l’avancement des pièces
  • Chaque pièce est unique, chaque étape sera effectuée dans un temps particulier…
  • Travail de l’enduit pour reboucher les fentes et les manques, le plus souvent en plusieurs fois (pour le laquage des fentes, au moins deux fois)
  • Pose des poudres de métal (argent, étain, bronze, voire or si la pièce céramique est prête à ce métal précieux)
  • Durant les temps d’attente de polymérisation, laquage d’un bol en bois et essais sur papiers, toiles, bois, céramiques selon les besoins (réparation, création ou embellissement)

Jours 4 et 5

Matin et après-midi

  • Passage des laques de finitions, sur les kintsugi et les petits échantillons afin de voir l’étape des couches terminales et le polissage, étape finale de toute laque d’or
  • KINTSUGI (jointure à l’or)
    L'idée du Kintsugi n'est pas de décorer, mais de rendre à l'objet l'essence de sa beauté.
    KIN TSUGI jointure or, GIN STUGI jointure argent, TIN STUGI à l'étain, URUSHI TSUGI jointure à la laque, colorée ou non, YOBI TSUGI avec tessons de céramique)

 

*la laque végétale peut provoquer une dermatite de contact allergique (d’où le port des gants !), afin de diminuer les effets éventuels vous pouvez prendre de l’homéopathie une semaine avant (puis une semaine après)

Trainers

with Martine Rey

For 40 years, the work of Martine Rey, in perpetual motion, has explored space and time through urushi lacquer and the melancholy of objects so dear to Japanese culture: Mono no aware.

The artist thus confronts a material whose application technique reflects her own personal and artistic journey, one of patience and delicacy.

"I create objects that create an emotional, even intimate connection between oneself and the object, a ceaseless quest for the lost object, and/or the one that has always been missing."

Martine Rey, a lacquer artist specializing in urushi plant-based lacquer, discovered this ancestral technique 40 years ago during her studies at Kyoto University of Fine Arts in Japan, where she trained under Master Shinkaï. This initiatory journey profoundly influenced her artistic journey, revealing a close connection with Japanese culture. Since then, she has continued to reinvent this living material in her works.

After training in "European lacquer" at the École Supérieure des Arts Appliqués de Paris, she settled in Voiron, where she still lives and works today. In 1980, she founded the LAC (Laqueurs Associés pour la Création) association and taught vegetable lacquer at the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Appliqués et Métiers d'Art de Paris between 2002 and 2009. Her work has been exhibited in France and abroad, and she has been selected several times for the Ishikawa Triennale. She has also been invited to the World Urushi Culture Council Symposium in Tokyo and the International Fair of Lacquer and Painting Design in Ishikawa.

Far from limiting herself to the ornamentation of objects, Martine Rey uses urushi to transform ordinary objects into relics or talismans, revealing their history and hidden essence. Her approach is marked by a close connection with Japan and its aesthetic, particularly the "poignant melancholy of things" (Mono no aware). Her creations are rooted in a quest for silent beauty, where the slowness and meticulousness of the lacquer technique mark the passage of time, making each gesture a bearer of memory and sensitivity. For 40 years, she has explored this space-time, giving urushi lacquer all its depth and preciousness.

Martine Rey thus creates a shared space of discovery and intimacy, a place where memories and gestures intertwine. This space unfolds through the multiple layers of lacquer, similar to deeply buried palimpsests (manuscripts made from parchments reused after the erasure of previous writings). Lacquer acts as a witness to the passage of time, connecting the present to memory.

Martine Rey is represented by Galerie Sinople. A former resident of Villa Kujoyama, she is particularly sensitive to the transmission of her craft. She has a passion for Urushi lacquer.

She trains in kintsugi, the art of repairing wounds, both literally and figuratively, using centuries-old techniques.

Methods used

  • Classroom, multipurpose room, workshops with professional equipment
  • Materials provided
  • Individual and collaborative work
  • Workshop work
  • Active participation and experimentation of participants are encouraged

Monitoring and evaluation procedures

  • Collective and personalized monitoring of work, regular updates
  • Self-assessment of technical skills
  • Collective feedback
  • Sign-in sheet per half-day
  • Certification of completion issued by Campus MaNa

Duration and method of organization:

Target audience:
The training is open to all adult audiences
Level(s):
Language(s) :
French
English
Dates :
From 15/06/2026 to 19/06/2026
Duration:
5 days
Schedules:
9h-13h / 14h-18h
Location & organization:
Campus Mana Venezia
Cancellation conditions:
21 days before the start of the training
Number of participants:
6
Price: 
1950€ TTC

OPCOS: 100% financeable by AFDAS

In France, AFDAS is currently the only skills operator (OPCO) that can support training in Venice, under certain conditions.
This funding is primarily aimed at intermittent performers and affiliated or subject artist-authors.
If this applies to you, contact your AFDAS advisor in advance to prepare your application. Campus Mana can provide the necessary documents upon request.

The price includes training as well as materials and personal protective equipment. However, it does not cover transportation, accommodation, or full board (breakfast, lunch, and dinner).

Contact us inscriptions@campusmana.com

93
%
2024 training satisfaction rate
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