Reimagining Traditional Crafts with Cutting-Edge Technology

From May 13 to June 3, Swissnex Window #6 brought together voices from Japan and Switzerland to explore how tradition and technology can intersect. Through an exhibition and a special event at the Swiss Pavilion, the project highlighted new ways of connecting cultural heritage with digital innovation.

Exhibition

Swissnex Window #6

Facing Midosuji, the Champs Elysees of Osaka, the Swissnex Window offers a glimpse into Swiss ingenuity and excellence.

Exhibition Overview

In Osaka, we invited visitors to explore how traditional crafts can be revitalized through digital innovation. Featuring artists, visual designers, and innovators from Japan and Switzerland, it created a vibrant space where cultural heritage meets modern technology, attracting a diverse audience drawn by interests in art, design, innovation, and both Swiss and Japanese traditions.

The exhibition explored innovative ways to bridge tradition and innovation in craftsmanship and cultural heritage through various media- posters, AI-generated images, and a CGI short film. Echoes of the Alps, created by Swiss creative duo Get It Studio, reinterpreted elements of Swiss folklore through the lens of generative AI, blurring the line between craft and code. Complementing this, the CGI short film Mirage by Japanese visual designer Takafumi Matsunaga drew inspiration from katagami stencils and reimagined a way to showcase this traditional craft. Together, the two projects offered a cross-cultural dialogue on how technology can reinterpret and revitalize crafts and cultural heritage.

The exhibition was complemented by a special event in the Swiss Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka; find out more below!

Special event

Insights from the experts

Under the global initiative led by the Museum für Gestaltung Zürich and Swissnex, the event Reimagining Traditional Crafts with Cutting-Edge Technology brought together artists, designers, and innovators to explore how traditional crafts can be revitalized through modern technology. Held on May 22 at the Swiss Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka, the evening centered on the dialogue between cultural heritage and digital innovation.

Sophie Grossmann, research associate at the Museum für Gestaltung Zürich and curator of the initiative, opened the event by tracing the museum’s legacy and its connection to the Japanese stencil craft of katagami. She emphasized the power of design, stating:

Design serves as a universal language, it connects time, culture, and perspectives

Following this introduction was the screening of Mirage, a CGI short film by Japanese visual designer Takafumi Matsunaga. The film reimagines katagami through modern animation techniques. Matsunaga explained the idea process behind the video and the link between katagami and the artwork.

A panel discussion moderated by Hideki Yoshimoto, Craft x Tech Founder, brought together:

  • Sophie Grossmann, Research Associate at the Museum für Gestaltung Zürich,
  • Takafumi Matsunaga, Visual Designer,
  • Yoichi Ochiai, Media Artist.

Together, they shared diverse perspectives on whether technology can safeguard, reinterpret, and breathe new life into traditional crafts—reflecting on the relationship between historical knowledge and contemporary creativity.

Organizers

  • Swissnex
  • Museum für Gestaltung Zürich
  • Get It Studio

With the support of

  • Presence Switzerland
  • Swiss Pavilion