The Art Explora-Académie des beaux-arts European Award editions

The European Award support cultural organisations championing new dialogues between the arts and audiences. The Award also offers a platform for sharing and disseminating best practices.

Discover previous years shortlisted projects of the European Award!

Shortlisted projects

Year
Country
Laureate Icon of the European Art Explora Award Academy of Fine Arts
Cité de la musique - Philharmonie de Paris, France

"Les mallettes culturelles": Offering seniors living in care homes the opportunity to explore the Music Museum’s collections with cultural toolboxes.

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"Les mallettes culturelles", Cité de la musique - Philharmonie de Paris, France

The "cultural kits"offer seniors living in nursing homes the opportunity to explore the collections of the Musée de la Musique through participatory workshops led independently by the staff of the establishments.

This set of four kits provides clear and detailed activity materials in which music is both the subject of the workshop and a tool for well-being and memory support.

In addition to the activity sheets, there is a multisensory box containing items to touch, handle, and smell, a puzzle, a photo gallery, and rich multimedia content.

This first edition will explore music through the theme of the four seasons, a unifying theme capable of evoking emotions, sensations, and memories. Each kit will be dedicated to a season, creating a dialogue between music and other arts.

The kits aim to involve all staff at the establishments, through activities that foster a collective dynamic to enrich the daily lives of residents.

For the first time, the museum is designing educational materials adapted for independent use by activity teams. Training and remote support will enable beneficiaries to make the most of the kits.

© Photo : Gil Lefauconnier

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2025
France
Laureate Icon of the European Art Explora Award Academy of Fine Arts
The Lambert Collection, France

"Inspire micro-schools": Giving pupils at risk of dropping out the opportunity to rediscover the joy of learning by creating a class within museums or art centres.

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"Micro School Inspire, La Collection Lambert, France

The "micro-école Inspire", a unique initiative in France created in collaboration with the French Ministry of Education, gives students who have dropped out of school the opportunity to rediscover a love of learning through art, thanks to total immersion in the art centre and encounters with artists from diverse backgrounds.

Permanently located in the heart of the museum, the Inspire micro-school offers Year 5 and Year 6 pupils who have dropped out of school a new methodology: the works on display and encounters with artists from all disciplines are the guiding thread for learning the fundamentals.

The museum becomes a place of exploration and emancipation, a space to be inhabited differently and together: with visitors, staff and artists... As the exhibitions come and go, the children reveal themselves, reclaim the world and build themselves up as sensitive citizens, far from stigmatisation.  

Today, the challenge is twofold: to ensure the sustainability of the programme and to prepare for the transfer of this experience to other cultural institutions, both in France and in Europe. This network of partners in arts and cultural education will enable this promising model to grow.

© Photo: Pauline Abascal - La Boîte Orageuse

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2025
France
Laureate Icon of the European Art Explora Award Academy of Fine Arts
EESTI AJALOOMUUSEUM SA, Estonia

"Future Heritage: A MakerLab and Roleplay Experience for Creating the History of Tomorrow": Empowering young students, particularly Ukrainian students, to reinterpret works of art in the museum through hands-on artistic practice and immersive experiences.

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"Future Heritage: A MakerLab and Roleplay Experience for Creating the History of Tomorrow", EESTI AJALOOMUUSEUM SA, Estonia

"Future Heritage" is an innovative educational project by the Estonian History Museum that empowers young people to explore, create, and define their own heritage through artistic expression, hands-on making, and immersive storytelling. The project combines two powerful learning formats: a new MakerLab space and a series of immersive roleplaying games (larps). In the MakerLab, students will work with historical objects and themes, using modern tools like 3D printers, laser cutters, and craft materials to replicate, reinterpret, and design artefacts that reflect both the past and their personal identities.

The roleplaying experiences, inspired by Nordic larp traditions, invite participants to engage emotionally and imaginatively with history through stories that connect archaeology, rituals, memory, and the future. One such experience, “Underwater Heritage”, lets students embody both the creators and discoverers of lost objects.

The project particularly focuses on engaging underrepresented youth, including Ukrainian students and children in foster care. Through a series of workshops, co-creation sessions, and inspirational meetings with practitioners and historians, participants will develop a deeper understanding of heritage as something they shape, not just inherit. Culminating in a youth-led exhibition in late 2026, Future Heritage positions young people as active storytellers and future-makers within the museum and society.

© Photo: Vahur Lõhmus

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2025
Estonia
Laureate Icon of the European Art Explora Award Academy of Fine Arts
Open Up Music, United Kingdom

"Clarion - an instrument for everyone": Making the Clarion, a musical instrument that can be played expressively with any part of the body, widely available to young disabled people.

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"Clarion - an instrument for everyone", Open Up Music, UK

Across Europe, disabled people remain underrepresented in cultural life. Despite the EU’s Charter of Fundamental Rights and inclusion mandates, many still face structural and practical barriers to accessing or making music. Traditional instruments are often physically inaccessible, and most digital music tools have not been designed to be compatible with assistive technologies.

Clarion offers a transformative solution. Co-designed with disabled young people, Clarion can be played expressively with any part of the body - including the eyes. Available on iPad and Windows, it offers a highly adaptable, joyful entry into music-making. This isn’t just about access - it’s about artistry. Clarion enables users to shape sound with intent and emotion. It invites exploration, improvisation, and performance.

With support from Art Explora, we will:

Make Clarion available to individuals (currently it is only available to organisations)

Develop training materials to equip music teachers with the confidence and knowledge to teach Clarion effectively

Build relationships with music institutions interested in inclusive practice, offering entry points for collaboration and shared learning

This work directly supports Art Explora’s aim to broaden access to culture and empower communities through innovative, inclusive models.

© Photo : Jon Furley

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2025
United Kingdom
Laureate Icon of the European Art Explora Award Academy of Fine Arts
Thames Festival Trust, United Kingdom

"Turning the Tide: Multidisciplinary project working with and focused on disabled people in an unique river location in London.

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"Turning the Tide", Thames Festival Trust, United Kingdom

Turning the Tide is a major cultural engagement project by Turner Prize-nominated artist Catherine Yass, designed to challenge perceptions of disabled people in public space and empower disabled young creatives. Key elements include:

Partners: Delivered with Thames Festival Trust, disabled-led theatre company Graeae, and the City of London Culture Service.

Main Installation: A site-specific film installation projected onto the iconic, abandoned old Blackfriars Railway Bridge columns over four nights in September 2026, featuring young disabled performers and reaching an estimated 10,000 viewers.

Creative Development: Collaboratively developed with a disabled-led artistic team including Artistic Director of Graeae Jenny Sealey, promoting excellence in work by D/deaf, disabled, and neurodivergent artists.

Education Programme: A UK-wide series of visual art workshops (June 2026–March 2027) in filming, photography, and projection, co-designed for disabled and SEND children, young people, and adults, led by Yass.

Exhibition: A month-long riverside display featuring community-created artworks and insights into the creative process, with an expected audience of 390,000.

Final Film: A standalone artwork film by Yass and videographer Hugo Glendinning, to be screened nationally in 2027 at venues such as ICA and Whitechapel Gallery, with wide scope for national & international touring potential.

© Photo : Catherine Yass

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2025
United Kingdom
Laureate Icon of the European Art Explora Award Academy of Fine Arts
Le Nouveau Printemps, France

"Rossy de Palma Invites Toulouse": Inviting a renowned artist to imagine and develop the programme of a contemporary art festival in collaboration with the people and artists of Toulouse.

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"Rossy de Palma Invites Toulouse", Le Nouveau Printemps, France

Rossy de Palma invites Toulouse and infiltrates a neighborhood of the city through a well-established, collaborative festival and artistic and mediation projects involving residents and users of the neighborhood.

In 2026, the Le Nouveau Printemps festival invites multidisciplinary artist Rossy de Palma for an edition resolutely focused on the public. The festival takes over the Matabiau and Bonnefoy station neighborhood, its interstices, its public spaces, its artistic and unusual venues, and invents new artistic formats in a neighborhood and city undergoing rapid transformation, the beating heart of the metropolis and a region at the heart of Mediterranean Europe.

Le Nouveau Printemps is introducing a new, enhanced method of audience engagement: involving the neighborhood, connecting with artists and local communities, promoting heritage and creativity, and encouraging residents to participate in numerous projects in the program or in the organization of the festival itself.

We believe that a festival of this size and renown bringing together an international artist and a city is innovative, original, and well-suited to current challenges. The whole project already serves as a model of shared and demanding cultural development for other localities.

© Photo : Théa Drouin

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2025
France
Laureate Icon of the European Art Explora Award Academy of Fine Arts
Center National pour la Création Adaptée (CNCA), France

"La Grande Parade #2": Involving inhabitants of the Morlaix town region, particularly those with disabilities and across all generations, in the creation of a biennial artistic, creative and inclusive parade.

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"La Grande Parade #2", Centre National pour la Création Adaptée (CNCA), France

Enabling wider access to artistic practices for audiences of all ages, with or without disabilities, from city centers to rural areas, and highlighting the creativity and uniqueness of each individual during a festive and inclusive event in public spaces.

The GRANDE PARADE places as much emphasis on the creative workshops leading up to the event (in dance, visual arts, writing) as on the big parade on the day itself. It is an opportunity to engage together, in a diverse setting, in creative processes and to celebrate our uniqueness.

© Photo : Alain Derrien

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2025
France
Laureate Icon of the European Art Explora Award Academy of Fine Arts
Nordisk Teaterlaboratorium - Odin Teatret, Denmark

"Dreams of the Future": Engaging 6,000 children in Holstebro to transform the streets into in a large-scale symphony performance using sticks and buckets.

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"Dreams of the Future", Nordisk Teaterlaboratorium - Odin Teatret, Denmark

DREAMS OF THE FUTURE unleashed the creative energy of 2500 students aged 5-13, inviting them to reimagine music through bold, rule-breaking performances during Holstebro Festuge 2024. Building on NTL's tradition of youth-led cultural experiments, this project transformed the traditional choir format into a vibrant, interdisciplinary spectacle where participants fused singing with urban intervention. The unconventional concert spilled out of venues into public spaces – challenging perceptions of music while fostering ownership of cultural expression. Young Wild Dreams prioritizes playful rebellion, with a innovative focus on reinventing performance for TikTok-generation audiences. The project targets both participating youth, their teachers, friends, families and curious community members, creating bridges between generations through daring artistic encounters. By empowering youth to "hijack" and reinvent established art forms, NTL cultivates tomorrow's cultural innovators today. The second edition of DREAMS OF THE FUTURE 2025/2026 will turn Holstebro into a rhythmic playground, as students transform everyday objects into percussion instruments through STOMP-inspired performances. This explosive edition includes a replication strategy for empowering youth to reimagine urban soundscapes. Approximately 6000 students will co-create pulse-pounding public performances—turning the city into a stage where trash cans, brooms, and bodies become instruments of wild, joyful rebellion.

© Photo: Nordisk Teaterlaboratorium

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2025
Denmark
Laureate Icon of the European Art Explora Award Academy of Fine Arts
Mariupol theatre of Ukraine in Exile, Ukraine

"ALASKA: a play about the pursuit of happiness in an abusive world": Inviting displaced teenagers and young Ukrainians to join peers in Europe to adapt and perform the last play written by young people from Mariupol before the start of the war.

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"ALASKA: a play about the pursuit of happiness in an abusive world", Mariupol theatre of Ukraine in Exile, Ukraine

An umbrella project that includes: 2 residencies and the recreation of the award winning performance ALASKA with locals every time, a toolkit-booklet detailing our methodology, three documentary films (two local, one final) and a digital dissemination strategy across Europe, powered by our team that is based in 10 EU countries.

A multilingual, documentary-based performance created with young people from Mariupol, Ukraine, ALASKA explores war, trauma, love, loneliness, and the universal search for meaning. In each country (Italy, Poland) the project invites local youth and displaced Ukrainians to co-create and perform the play after a seven-day devising workshop. Each version features a new mixed cast, offering a safe space for self-expression, healing, and connection.

Local directors and theatre-makers are invited to observe the entire process, learning the tools we use to engage emotionally affected participants. After the residency, we stay in contact with them for one year, offering mentoring and support as they adapt the method in their own projects.

Born in Mariupol’s Theatre before its destruction in 2022, ALASKA is a living, evolving message of peace. The project includes audience engagement through surveys, three documentaries, and a Toolkit–Booklet to share our trauma-informed methodology across Europe, ensuring scalability and long-term legacy.

© Photo : Jacek Klejment

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2025
Ukraine
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