The network’s day-to-day activities

Every year, the network brings its members together for new promotional and awareness-raising activities. Specific events, such as World Art Nouveau Day, mark significant milestones in our calendar. The initiatives proposed by our members are consistently more innovative, addressing the public’s queries and contemporary issues. Whether it’s a workshop for professionals or a conference for enthusiasts, explore what’s coming up next on the RANN calendar, or take a look back at some of our past experiences!

CALL FOR PAPERS: Art Nouveau as a New EUtopiaInternational Symposium, 1-2 June 2026 in Budapest Theme: The Cladding of Art Nouveau Buildings Theory, history & practice of architectural covering materials: ceramics, hydraulic cement tiles, terrazzo, metlachi and more. Organised within the Creative Europe project “Art Nouveau as a New EUtopia”

RANN Summer School 2025: Hands-on Conservation of Art Nouveau Heritage, July – September 2025, Lviv The Réseau Art Nouveau Network (RANN), in partnership with the LME “Heritage Bureau”, is pleased to announce the 2025 edition of its Summer School in Lviv, dedicated to hands-on conservation and restoration of Art Nouveau

The works of the Art Nouveau as a New EUtopia artists-in-residence As part of the Creative Europe project Art Nouveau as a New EUtopia, five contemporary artists have created new works inspired by the Art Nouveau legacy, developed during residencies hosted by RANN members across Europe. Each artist offers a

Alcoy Modernist Fair 2025 VIII Alcoy Modernist Fair: “Tribute to Timoteo Briet: The restart of beauty” DATES: from September 22 to 26, 2025 FROM MONDAY TO FRIDAY: Unveiling of the Fair’s poster Modernist and dramatized guided tours Guided tours for schoolchildren (with educational materials) Exhibitions Lectures Workshops (creating period-appropriate headwear)

RANN Artistic Residency 2025 L’acte d’habiter Blending poetic essay and intimate journal, L’acte d’habiter (The Act of Inhabiting) explores what it means today to “inhabit” a legacy. Eight artists take up residence in Art Nouveau spaces across Oradea, Aveiro, Nancy, Mons, and Brussels. By living and creating within these environments,

RANN Summer School 2025: Secession, 30 June – 4 July 2025, Ljubljana The Réseau Art Nouveau Network (RANN), in partnership with the National Museum of Slovenia, is pleased to announce the 2025 edition of its Summer School in Ljubljana, dedicated to the Art Nouveau movement and its intersections with conservation

World Art Nouveau Day 2025 RANN Members WAND 2025 Programmes: Horta Museum, Brussels Alcoy, Spain Aveiro, Portugal Ljubljana, Slovenia Bad Nauheim, Germany Nancy, France Riga, Latvia Mons, Belgium Oradea, Romania Activity proposal – This year, take your spot under the rainbow! To celebrate World Art Nouveau Day 2025, the Réseau

Organised by the Réseau Art Nouveau Network in partnership with the Faculty of Architecture La Cambre Horta (Université Libre de Bruxelles), the 2025 Summer School invites students and young professionals to explore the restoration and sustainable conservation of Art Nouveau heritage.The programme, part of the Creative Europe project Art Nouveau

As part of our European project ‘Art Nouveau as a New EUtopia’, we are pleased to invite you to the international symposium : Bringing Art Nouveau heritage back to life: theory and practice in restoration. From the Venice Charter to the Turin Declaration. 🎧 Simultaneous translation will be provided in

The Réseau Art Nouveau Network, a European network for the study, protection and promotion of Art Nouveau heritage, celebrates its 25th anniversary this year. An important milestone that RANN intends to celebrate by organising with the collaboration of urban.brussels an international conference dedicated to the restoration of the Art Nouveau

In a global context of human disconnection from nature and questions about social inequalities in our societies and access to culture and heritage for all, Art Nouveau, as a major European architectural movement of the 20th century, offers a stimulating and fruitful perspective for rethinking the links between art, heritage