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17th Conference of the Society for Artistic Research (SAR)

The Bratto Cradle: Can a Vernacular Object Reconnect a Dispersed Community?

Presented by: Anna Eleonora Fabrizi
πŸ—“οΈ Wednesday, 24 June β€” 10:50am - 11:30am (40 mins)
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The Bratto Cradle: Can a Vernacular Object Reconnect a Dispersed Community?
Abstract
The Bratto Cradle is a vernacular wooden cradle from a small village in Lunigiana, Tuscany - Italy. It is no longer produced, just like the other domestic objects that once made this mountain community locally known. The cradle emerged within a pastoral society in which villagers were not full-time artisans: during the winter months, shepherds produced furniture using local wood, natural pigments, and joinery techniques without nails. For the rest of the year they were engaged in other forms of labour. This made the community highly flexible, but also made the transmission of knowledge fragile, seasonal, and mostly oral.Today, only a few examples of the cradle survive. Its distinctive form appears in old paintings and traces of local memory, but no longer belongs to common artisanal practice. Its colours and symbols were also linked to protective functions, intended to ward off evil. After the Second World War, the village was gradually abandoned; many inhabitants migrated, including to London, where they carried elements of their habits and local language, known as β€œbratash”. The material culture that once shaped the village has become increasingly unstable and difficult to transmit.This experimental format asks whether such an object can become more than a relic. Can a vernacular object reactivate a community through artistic and productive processes? Starting from the rediscovery of the cradle, the session reflects on workshops and temporary courses already developed, in which the object became a source of inspiration for graphic works and design outcomes. Moving beyond temporary activation, the proposal asks whether the cradle can still generate artistic residencies, collective discussion, and process-based research, including reflections on biomaterials and local making. The session opens a shared inquiry into how a fragile object β€” rooted in oral transmission, migration, and disappearance β€” may still act as an epistemic resource for contemporary art.
Biography
Anna Eleonora Fabrizi is an Italian designer, illustrator, and doctoral researcher at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma. With a background spanning both business and artistic training, her work brings together geometric rigour, colour, and a strong connection to nature. Based in Carrara, she develops marble objects, paper sculptures, illustrations, and socially engaged projects exploring the relationship between territory, materials, artisanship, and local communities.