The 2026 edition impels participants to push boundaries, move beyond boxed thinking and convention, and create wearable art for an evolving world—where jewellery design, heritage and technology coexist in a meaningful manner. “Quantum Couture” shifts the focus from simply preserving form to translating meaning through a lens of “augmented imagination.”
Speaking on this year’s theme, Mr. Kirit Bhansali, Chairman, GJEPC, said, “India’s artisanal legacy is not a static memory; it is a living force that is actively shaping the global future of design. With ‘Quantum Couture,’ we are challenging designers to treat jewellery legacy as an evolving system. This is not just a trend, it is a new operating system for jewellery. We are inviting the world to see India not just as a manufacturing hub, but as a global muse that blends Indian craft with modern techniques.”
Mr. Ashish Borda, Convener, Promotions & Marketing, GJEPC, added, “Marketing in the modern era requires a narrative that resonates across generations. ‘Quantum Couture’ is our answer to a shifting consumer landscape where Gen Z and Boomers alike seek jewelry that is fluid, inclusive, and innovative. By pushing our designers to explore ‘augmented imagination,’ we are ensuring that the Indian jewelry industry remains at the forefront of the global cultural conversation, making traditional craft irresistible to the digital-native consumer.”
The 2026 theme is explored through three distinct sub-themes, each acting as a lens to define a new couture vocabulary:
1. Quantum Couture – Embroidery: Heritage Rewired Through Structure and Light
This theme reinterprets traditional embroidery—lace, brocade, filigree and beadwork—into sculptural jewellery forms. Here’s a chance to unleash your creativity and convert couture textiles into jewellery structures that feel woven, layered and suspended. The textile-inspired elements can include brocade, crochet and lace cut-outs, reimagined in precious materials. Moreover, micro-pearl weaving, bejewelled nets, fluid tassels and fringes lend movement and lightness, while yellow gold and white metals form the structural base.
2. Quantum Couture – Micro-Painting: The Intimacy of Detail in the Age of Acceleration
In this direction, jewellery becomes a micro-canvas of storytelling, rich with symbolism, where technology enhances artisanal expression rather than replacing it.
This design direction draws from time-honoured techniques such as the jadau, meenakari kundan enamelling, micro-mosaics and miniature paintings, where every surface becomes a canvas of detail. Engravings, carvings and openwork designs add depth and dimension, while rarified traditions like Thewa art bring luminous narrative to the fore.
3. Quantum Couture – Poetic Layers: Nature, Memory and Form in Dimensional Dialogue
This design direction draws from nature’s poetry, expressed through bejewelled fauna and flora rendered in layered, sculptural forms. Designs play with depth, relief and contrast to create expressive, gender-fluid pieces that merge poetic craft with contemporary construction. Techniques such as marquetry, engraving and carving, and fine filigree create depth and texture, while contrasting effects and coloured metals introduce visual drama and a contemporary sensibility.
Now in its 9th edition, the Artisan Awards 2026 is an invitation to design jewellery that resonates across generations, proving that the future of jewellery is not waiting to be preserved—it is already in the making.
Since its inception, The Artisan Awards have consistently challenged designers with disruptive themes that break stereotypes and elevate jewellery to the realm of wearable art—transcending mere intrinsic value. Each edition reinforces the belief that fine jewellery can serve as a powerful canvas for avant-garde creativity and contemporary expression. Entries undergo a rigorous, multi-stage jury evaluation process, beginning with a technical assessment and progressing through multiple rounds of expert judging. Beyond cash prizes, winners also receive internships with leading industry brands, while the winning and finalist pieces are showcased at prominent international trade shows under the India Design Gallery, curated and organised by GJEPC—offering designers unparalleled global visibility and recognition.
Jewellery manufacturers, retail brands, design labels, and design students are invited to submit their interpretations of “Quantum Couture,” joining a movement that redefines Brand India as a leader in innovation-led, sustainable, and visionary jewellery design. Sketches, along with the participation forms, must be submitted by 10th February 2026.
Paola De Luca, futurist and curator of the Quantum Couture theme, will hold an online ARTISAN AWARDS 2026- MASTER CLASS on 23 January at 2.30 pm India time, offering interested participants a deep dive into the three distinct categories.
Join Zoom Meeting
https://gjepc.zoom.us/j/89545181610?pwd=or2ovbOFsbpNo1z6yI5hfHBdtWznk0.1
ARTISAN AWARDS (www.theartisanawards.com)
The Artisan Jewellery Design Awards, an initiative of the Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC), is a prestigious design platform that celebrates innovation, originality and forward-thinking creativity in fine jewellery. Conceived to position India as a global design powerhouse, the awards encourage designers to push boundaries and reimagine jewellery as wearable art that goes beyond intrinsic value.
Over the years, The Artisan Awards have evolved into a globally recognised showcase of never-seen-before jewellery concepts, judged by an eminent international jury comprising leaders from luxury, fashion, art and design. Winners and finalists gain significant global exposure through showcases at leading international trade fairs and platforms curated by GJEPC, along with opportunities for industry internships and recognition across global media.
The Artisan Awards continue to reinforce Brand India as a source of visionary, design-led jewellery that seamlessly blends craftsmanship, contemporary thinking and cultural relevance.
About The Gem and Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC)
The Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council (GJEPC), set up by the Ministry of Commerce, Government of India (GoI) in 1966, is one of several Export Promotion Councils (EPCs) launched by the Indian Government, to boost the country’s export thrust, when India’s post-Independence economy began making forays in the international markets. Since 1998, the GJEPC has been granted autonomous status. The GJEPC is the apex body of the gems & jewellery industry and today represents 9000 members in the sector. With headquarters in Mumbai, GJEPC has Regional Offices in New Delhi, Kolkata, Chennai, Surat and Jaipur, all of which are major centres for the industry. It thus has a wide reach and is able to have a closer interaction with members to serve them in a direct and more meaningful manner. Over the past decades, GJEPC has emerged as one of the most active EPCs and has continuously strived to both expand its reach and depth in its promotional activities as well as widen and increase services to its members.
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