Cinnamon Lee, 2025 MAKE Award winner

Cinnamon Lee, 2025 MAKE Award winner

Author: Australian Design Centre November 3, 2025 Duration: 30:20

Host Lisa Cahill meets with the winner of the 2025 MAKE Award, metalsmith and jeweller Cinnamon Lee. Cinnamon tells us about her hybrid practice combining jewellery and lighting, the intricate process of making her winning work Noctua, and the hidden meanings embedded throughout the piece.

You'll hear from judges Brian Parkes and Simone LeAmon on what made Cinnamon's work a prize-winning piece.

Sydney-based artist Cinnamon Lee is trained as a gold and silversmith, creating wearable objects in the form of jewellery and non-wearable objects in the form of lighting. Her practice is characterised by meticulous hand-crafted detail, hidden elements, and a fascination with creating "more than meets the eye." Lee has been a practising artist for 30 years, having studied and taught at the Canberra School of Art's Gold and Silversmithing workshop.

Guests


Show highlights and takeaways

[00:03] Secrets and hidden beauty

"Everybody likes a secret."

Cinnamon Lee introduces her philosophy on jewellery and the personal relationship between object and wearer. She discusses her practice of hiding gemstones – sometimes partially, sometimes completely – inside rings and other pieces.

[02:54] A young metalworker

Cinnamon describes how she discovered metalworking at age 17 through Enmore Design Centre, where her mother was teaching.

"Once I was in that workshop it was like I'd found my calling, which I feel really fortunate about because it happened quite quickly."

She spent the next decade studying and eventually teaching at the Canberra School of Art's Gold and Silversmithing workshop with Johannes Kuhnan and Ragnar Hansen.

"It completely changed my life, that workshop."

[04:47] Cinnamon's practice

Cinnamon explains that she creates both wearable objects (jewellery) and non-wearable objects (lighting), often using very precious materials.

[00:05:12] Winning the 2025 MAKE Award

Lisa congratulates Cinnamon on winning the MAKE Award, biennial prize for innovation in Australian craft and design.

"It feels especially meaningful given that I am now marking the 30th year of being a practising artist. So to have this recognition by the craft and design community is very special."

Cinnamon reflects on her long relationship with the Australian Design Centre, dating back to her first exhibition as a student in 1995 at the Crafts Council of New South Wales Space in the Rocks, Sydney.

[06:44] Noctua: the winning work

Lisa asks about the meaning of Noctua, and Cinnamon explains it's the genus name for a cutworm, a type of nocturnal moth, with the Latin translation meaning Little Owl.

The object is a hybrid creation – a slender standing lamp made of stainless steel, just over one and a half metres tall, with a cylindrical head containing the light source.

But it holds secrets:

"As well as being a lamp, it also contains a wearable brooch. So the wearable...


There’s a story held within every object shaped by human hands, and Object: stories of design and craft from the Australian Design Centre is where those narratives unfold. This isn't a lecture series, but a series of conversations that pull up a chair beside the makers themselves. You’ll hear the subtle sounds of the studio and the thoughtful pauses as artists and designers explain not just how they work, but why. The focus is firmly on contemporary Australian practice, moving from broad explorations to deep dives into specific disciplines. For instance, one season is dedicated entirely to the world of ceramics, tracing the journey from raw material to finished piece. The most recent season offers an intimate, behind-the-scenes look at the 2023 MAKE Award, a major national prize for innovation. Through this podcast, you’ll meet the winner, Vipoo Srivilasa, alongside finalists like the collective High Tea with Mrs Woo and artists Julie Blyfield, Csongvay Blackwood, and Johannes Kuhnen. The perspectives of award judges, including Jason Smith, Hyeyoung Cho, and Brian Parkes, add another layer to the understanding of what drives contemporary craft forward. Each episode is a quiet immersion into the material, intellectual, and personal processes that define today's most compelling creative work.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 24

Object: stories of design and craft
Podcast Episodes
Learning and teaching ceramics with Jane Sawyer [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 29:18
What are the many ways to learn ceramics? How do you find your own sense of touch with clay?If you’re thinking about a hobby class or applying for a university or TAFE course, what’s good to know? Hear different approach…
Collecting ceramics with Brett Stone [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 27:47
How do you start a ceramics collection? Tips on collecting for beginners, how to collect from galleries, how to make a collecting group and how to administer and document your collection.The guests are Brett Stone, artis…
Plating up with Ilona Topolcsanyi: Production pottery [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 25:36
Ilona Topolcsanyi makes bespoke tableware for some of Australia's most notable chefs. She’s even made plates that world leaders have eaten from, like Barack Obama, Angela Merkel and Xi JinPing.Hear how Ilona designs and…
Object Series 2: Clay Connections [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 1:38
From production pottery to learning and teaching ceramics, museum collections and personal collecting - this season of Object is all about making with clay. Over five episodes you’ll meet Ilona Topolcsanyai, Brett Stone,…
The making of Living Treasures [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 32:30
In this bonus episode, you’ll meet one of the key people behind the original idea for the Living Treasures series of exhibitions - Brian Parkes. How did the idea of recognising Australia’s master craftspeople become a re…
Robert Baines [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 26:06
With a career spanning five decades, Robert Baines is one of Australia’s leading gold and silver smiths. Robert Baines makes intricately constructed jewellery and large-scale, sculptural, complex wire works that often co…
Les Blakebrough [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 23:55
In a career spanning seven decades, Les Blakebrough has become one of Australia's most acclaimed and influential ceramic artists.The ceramics of Les Blakebrough range from earthy functional ware to more delicate forms, m…
Liz Williamson [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 26:20
Liz Williamson is known as a ‘matriarch of Australian weaving’. Hear what Liz’s favourite ‘magical’ material is, how darning and repair informs her work, and how she works with weavers around the world.Liz Williamson is…
Marian Hosking [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 26:56
Jeweller Marian Hosking makes silver brooches, necklaces and vessels that are translations of the Australian bush. Hear why Marian thinks that souvenirs are underrated; the reason she still makes brooches and how she co-…
Prue Venables [not-audio_url] [/not-audio_url]

Duration: 30:40
Prue Venables is one of Australia’s most accomplished ceramics artist. Hear how Prue went from a career in science to pottery; how three tiny porcelain jugs changed everything for her; and her controversial advice for ne…