Musician and musicologist Matéo Crémades discovered a forgotten craft through instrument making. Fascinated by the baroque guitar, and being a player himself, it was while building his own from an old model that he was led to replicate a parchment rosette. This is a fine decorative ornament found on instruments from the 16th and 17th centuries such as lutes and harpsichords. Matéo developed his own expertise as a parchment rosette sculptor specialised in the reproduction of historical models. With a scalpel and leather punches, he meticulously carves and layers sheets of parchment, a very thin goatskin, to create intricate designs inspired by Gothic, baroque or Arab-Andalusian art. Today, as well as working with violin makers from all over Europe, Matéo takes the rosette out of its historical context and introduces it to contemporary art pieces that question our relationship to ornament and miniature.
Matéo Crémades is an expert artisan: he began his career in 2014
Matéo Crémades