Prince Albert II attended the opening of a free outdoor photography exhibition on Wednesday 8th April at the Jardins Saint-Martin on the Rocher, marking the second edition of a competition inviting young people aged 11 to 25 to explore the theme of heritage under threat.
The exhibition, organised by the Direction des Affaires Culturelles, displays 15 selected photographs on the railings of the Saint-Martin gardens and will remain on view until 4th October 2026 — the date of the European Heritage Days in the Principality.
The theme
This year’s competition asked participants to consider the threats facing both tangible and intangible cultural heritage: climate change, natural disasters, urbanisation, mass tourism and shifting social patterns. Tangible heritage encompasses architecture, works of art, archaeological sites and historic landscapes; intangible heritage includes language, traditions, gastronomy, performing arts and artisanal crafts. The theme gave young entrants the opportunity to reflect on what heritage means to them and how it might be preserved.
The competition ran from 15th January to 15th March and drew entries from across the Principality’s youth community.
Stacy Formosa, ‘Ma chère Principauté’
The jury and the prize-winners
The selection jury included Stéphane Bern, one of France’s most prominent voices on heritage preservation, and internationally renowned photographer and documentary maker Nick Danziger, alongside several figures from Monaco’s cultural world. From all submissions, 15 photographs were chosen for the exhibition.
Three special Jury Favourite prizes, one in each age category, were presented by Prince Albert II at the inauguration. The winners were Stacy Formosa (11–14 years) for Ma chère Principauté, Anne-Sophie Théroué (15–18 years) for Mémoire fragile derrière une grille, and Elisa Fabris Lagrassa (19–25 years) for A lenga munegascu ün periculu — a title in the Monegasque language that translates as “the Monegasque language, a danger.”
The exhibition is free and open to the public on the railings of the Jardins Saint-Martin until 4th October 2026.
Monaco’s Ukrainian community unites for launch of Les Amis de l’Ukraine
An evening at Les Grands Chais Monégasque brought together Monaco’s Ukrainian community and supporters for the launch of Les Amis de l’Ukraine.
On an evening defined by unity and togetherness, Les Grands Chais Monégasque held the inaugural cocktail reception for Les Amis de l’Ukraine, a new association here in Monaco led by Alexandre Caracchini.
Caracchini shared that the association, along with events like this, plays an important role in giving Ukrainians opportunities to meet and learn more about ongoing projects within the community. He noted that “together we are stronger”, emphasising that everyone can come together to help – Ukrainian or not. With such a positive response and strong turnout, Caracchini expressed high aspirations for the association’s future.
Building connection within Monaco’s Ukrainian community
Although he noted that roughly only 20% of Ukrainians in Monaco are currently connected with Les Amis de l’Ukraine, that number continues to grow through events like these. They are eager to host larger gatherings, further integrate with the Monaco community, and help Ukrainians find a place to meet others, particularly for those who have not yet found that since arriving in Monaco.
In the four months since the association was initiated, Caracchini shared that he has been very pleased with its progress. He believes it is important to bring philanthropy to everything being done in Monaco and emphasises the value of continued collaboration in raising awareness.
The event provided the opportunity to meet many inspiring individuals leading their own initiatives in support of Ukraine.
Humanitarian initiatives supporting Ukraine
Nataliya Dubosq, President of Agir and Soutenir l’Ukraine, alongside her husband Gael Dubosq, shared the many ways their association is involved in humanitarian efforts supporting Ukraine. One example of this is their support of Le Boulanger Sans Frontières, an organisation that travels to Ukraine to provide bread to people in need while also boosting morale. Stabnet, another association they collaborate with, is a stabilisation network supporting mobile hospitals. They aid in funding this and ensuring sufficient doctors, surgeons, and resources are available near the front lines.
In December, they also collaborated with Cœurs d’Avenir to coordinate a fundraising event in Cannes, where international ballet performers raised money for Ukrainian children who have lost a parent due to the war. Cœurs d’Avenir founder, Iryna Komara, also present at the event, shared that the organisation has already supported around 60 children over the past two years, with plans to help many more.
The association also organises football teams and matches for individuals who are amputees because of the war, offering them the opportunity to continue participating in sport. Throughout these conversations, one thing was clear: these individuals are deeply committed to their work, and collaboration only strengthens their impact.
Anna Kazimir, founder, and Svetlana Berezovska, president of UMA (Ukraine Monaco Association) offer an opportunity for Ukrainian culture to be shared in Monaco. Through fundraisers, events, and other humanitarian efforts – they launched the organisation in 2022 with the aim of supporting Ukrainians arriving from war-affected regions. This included assisting with accommodations, offering advice, language courses, and even chess clubs for families.
Their main goal is to be a bridge between countries. They welcome people of all cultures as a very international organisation. These efforts, beyond Monaco, include volunteers involved in delivering medical equipment, supporting hospitals, and contributing to wider humanitarian initiatives. At the event, they are eager to meet the many people present and see how else they can unite to help.
Strengthening dialogue and international cooperation
Ukrainian legal expert Olha Drachevska is the founder of Incolanse Law Firm and a recognised specialist in commercial and administrative law. With a PhD in law, she has advised leading industrial enterprises and is also a frequent media commentator on legal and societal issues. Speaking during the evening, she described it as “an important symbol of a new stage in the development of relations between Ukraine and Monaco”, highlighting the growing importance of cooperation between the two countries. She added that the opening of the Honorary Consulate reflects “a strong commitment to strengthening mutual trust and partnership”, while also creating “a platform for constructive engagement” across legal, cultural and economic spheres.
Emphasising Monaco’s global positioning, she noted that “Ukraine’s presence here carries strategic significance”, expressing confidence that the initiative marks “the beginning of a long-term and fruitful dialogue”.
Alexandre Caracchini brought together a group of Ukrainians based in the region with aspirations of creating unity and opportunity for one another. This theme resonated across conversations throughout the evening. As Les Amis de l’Ukraine continues its initiatives, the evening reflected a growing sense of connection and collaboration within the community.
Despite a limited rotation, the Roca Team delivered a composed performance against Barcelona to secure their EuroLeague play-in spot.
In a EuroLeague battle between two teams fighting for playoff positioning, AS Monaco Basket secured a 93-86 victory over FC Barcelona on Friday 10th April, ensuring the Roca Team’s place in the play-ins.
Both teams arrived with a competitive mindset, ready to take on the challenge. With Daniel Theis back in the lineup and Mike James having only recently returned in Wednesday’s match against ASVEL, cohesion and teamwork would prove essential in finding rhythm against a strong Barcelona squad.
Once again playing with only eight men, Monaco had much to ask of their players in their third game of the week. Despite a scoreless opening few minutes and early struggles from beyond the arc in the first quarter, the team found its rhythm by the second quarter.
An early lead from Barcelona kept them ahead for much of the first half, but Monaco was not allowing them to pull away. Tied at 44-44 with 10 seconds remaining in the first half, Jaron Blossomgame was sent to the free throw line for Monaco. He converted both, giving the Roca Team their first lead heading into halftime.
Monaco responds before halftime
Barcelona responded in kind, refusing to let Monaco extend their lead too far. The teams continued to apply pressure on one another, trading momentum throughout. The third quarter found the teams tied, once again, keeping the energy high inside the arena. Monaco went on a 7-0 run with the fans in Salle Gaston Médecin cheering them on.
AS Monaco Basket played like a unified team in this pivotal matchup of their season. Each player on the court brought immense value to the outcome of the game, whether it be from Mike James’ 16 points, Elie Okobo’s 16 points and 8 assists, or Juhann Begarin’s steal in the second quarter, which shifted the momentum.
What’s next for the Roca Team
After this Sunday’s Betclic Elite match against Bourg-en-Bresse, the team will have some days to recover in preparation for their final regular season match, at home against Hapoel Tel Aviv. A well-earned recovery period for a small roster who have proved their energy and passion can take them far.
A dominant Jannik Sinner dethroned reigning champion Carlos Alcaraz (7-6, 6-3) to not only take the Monte-Carlo Masters crown but also to replace the Spaniard as the world’s No.1.
You can’t say that Alcaraz was caught by surprise. Of the two finalists, it is the Spaniard who is the clay court specialist, but Sinner, who approached this one as the favourite. The Italian had won the previous three Masters tournaments without losing a single set, becoming the first player to pull off the feat. Whilst his run of 37 consecutive set wins came to an end in the quarter-finals of the Monte-Carlo Masters, he dispatched world No.3 Alexander Zverev in straight sets in the semi-final.
Sinner evokes a “strange” final
The Italian’s form was not lost on Alcaraz, who said at the start of the week that he was resigned to losing his top spot to Sinner either “at this tournament or at the next” and, approaching Sunday’s final, he said that he”could lose to Sinner on any surface”, including on clay. For Sinner, the Monte-Carlo Masters is a tournament to prepare for the clay court season. He admitted that he did not feel entirely at ease on the surface, even if he does often train at the Monte-Carlo Country Club. By the end of the week, he was comfortable enough to dispatch the reigning champion and now-former world No.1.
It was nonetheless Alcaraz who landed the first blow, a reminder of who is king on clay; breaking back immediately, Sinner reaffirmed who is the man of the moment. In blustery and grey conditions at the MCCC, this wasn’t the most aesthetic Monte-Carlo Masters final. It had an effect on the game too. “Strange” was how Sinner described it, a “difficult” one in the words of Alcaraz.
“It swirled. One minute, the wind was working in your favour, the next it was against you […] it’s true that he (Sinner) plays well when there is a lot of wind,” added the Spaniard. Fatigue, the Italian added, was also a factor for both players, but for Sinner, it didn’t show.
The Leclerc brothers, Charles and Arthur, alongside Armand Duplantis, at the MCCC. Photo credit: Luke Entwistle, Monaco Life
A double fault from Alcaraz in the ninth game provided the chance for Sinner to break, but it wouldn’t be taken. It was another double fault from the Spaniard, who lacked his usual imperiousness on serve, that handed Sinner the first set in the tie-break (7-5). Alcaraz started the second set as he did the first, breaking his opponent in the third game. Once again, Sinner could respond, but missed two of his break points.
Sinner “surprised” by Monte-Carlo Masters triumph
Alcaraz would hold to make it 3-1, but he would not win another game. Sinner needed three bites of the apple to break in the sixth game and a further two to break him in the eighth. Winning four straight games left Sinner serving for the championship. At times this week, Alcaraz exuded a feeling of helplessness, a reluctant acceptance of fate, and it was in this spirit that he handed over his Monte-Carlo Masters crown and world No.1 spot.
Sinner addressing the crowd after his win in the Monte-Carlo Masters. Photo credit: Luke Entwistle, Monaco Life
A failed return from the Spaniard and Sinner was down on his haunches, soaking in the accolades of an Italian crowd, who over the course of the week have made the MCCC their home, and they saw their hero win his first big title on clay. “It means a lot to me,” said the new world No.1. “It wasn’t easy, but surprised is maybe the right word. It would be strange to say that I am not surprised, but pleasantly so. I think I will need a bit more time to realise what has happened.” Alcaraz said that he wasn’t surprised. In fact, the only person surprised by Sinner’s imperious form is Sinner. Tennis’ dominant duopoly will now have Roland Garros in their sights.
The final of the Monte-Carlo Masters will be a shootout between the world’s top two, Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner, after the former dispatched local hero and history-maker Valentin Vacherot in the semi-finals on Saturday.
Going into last year’s edition of the Monte-Carlo Masters, Vacherot was ranked 256th in the world. At the end of this year’s edition, he was guaranteed to be in the world’s top 20. Part of a semi-final line-up that included all of the world’s top three players (Alcaraz, Sinner, and Alexander Zverev), the winner of the Shanghai Masters certainly doesn’t look out of place. “It’s fantastic, and when I see the three other players, I am really proud to be amongst them,” said Vacherot after securing his place in the semis thanks to a win over Alex de Minaur the previous night (6-4, 3-6, 6-3).
“My biggest strength is that I’m playing at home,” said Vacherot pre-match. The Monégasque was pushed by the likes of Prince Albert II, Formula One drivers Oscar Piastri, Ollie Bearman, Alex Albon, and Gabriel Bortoleto, as well as tennis legend Boris Becker. “This is your moment,” they would chant, as Vacherot looked to match the intensity and aggression from the current world No.1 and reigning Monte-Carlo Masters champion, Alcaraz. If there were any nerves, and they certainly didn’t show, an imposing first service game from the Monégasque set the tone.
The difference between these two wasn’t flagrant, but it was unsurprisingly the current best-in-the-world who had the larger palette, mixing brute force with deft chips. Vacherot, who has had to contend with some humid night-time thrillers on Court Rainier III, was made to run. The physical element played its part in a match decided by fine margins.
McLaren driver Oscar Piastri at the Monte-Carlo Masters. Photo credit: Luke Entwistle, Monaco Life
It was in the third game that Alcaraz took the only break point on offer in the first set. Vacherot didn’t have the response, and whenever he tried to impose the rhythm, he couldn’t force the issue (6-4). It was a case of rinse and repeat for Alcaraz, who also made the break in the third game of the second set. But this time, Vacherot could muster a response and an immediate one at that, as he broke in the next game, gratefully accepting Alcaraz’s gift of a double-fault.
Now, Alcaraz was being pushed, and there was a scent of opportunity for Vacherot in Alcaraz’s next service game. At 30-15, the Spaniard almost double-faulted, but instead, he held. A roaring “Vamos” and a clenched fist from the man desperate to retain his title… and his No.1 standing.
Sinner untouchable on his service game
Alcaraz would break Vacherot in the next game and only needed to hold his serve to secure his place alongside Sinner in Sunday’s final. There would not be a second break of service and the tournament that Vacherot dreamt of winning more than a Grand Slam, slips through his fingers. His rise in recent months suggests he will have more chances. “I am happy to come out of this game feeling frustrated because it shows that I want to do better,” reacted Vacherot, Monaco’s history-maker, who departed the scene to a big ovation from the MCCC crowd, but not before wishing Alcaraz “good luck” for his final encounter.
The reigning champion, however, must go into the final as the underdog, given Sinner’s current form. The Italian’s run of winning 37 consecutive games in Masters events came to an end in the Round of 16, but after beating Felix Auger-Aliassime in straight sets in the quarter-final (6-3, 6-4), he then made light work of Alexander Zverev.
Vacherot walks off as he exits the Monte-Carlo Masters. Photo credit: Luke Entwistle, Monaco Life
Three breaks of service in the opening set set him on his way to a place in Sunday’s final. His German opponent competed better in the second set but never got close to breaking Sinner’s serve. Audibly more physically exerted than his opponent, Zverev was always clinging on. He managed to do so on his service games, but only won two points out of a possible 20 on Sinner’s service game. Mechanical, robotic, tidy are words often used to describe Sinner’s style and they were all pertinent here. He was controlled and unfazed before choosing his moment to accelerate and land the final blow.
A fine shot down the line set up two match points in what would be Zverev’s final service game. In such ruthless form, Sinner only needed one (6-1, 6-4). It sets up the final that many anticipated… and wanted.
There is no website. No boutique. No collection. Benoît Miniou — former director at Hermès, founder of Les Ateliers Victor and Benoît Miniou Studio, is a man whose clients include governments, embassies and some of the wealthiest individuals on the planet — and he operates almost entirely in the shadows.
“What’s important is the story,” he says, when asked about the deliberate discretion. “I’m the creator of someone’s story. I want the focus, I want the light, to be put on the story.”
The story Miniou is currently telling — the one that has brought him to Monaco, that inspired this year’s Bal de la Rose and that will, early next year, see a rocket carry Princess Grace’s roses into orbit — is perhaps the most personal project of his career. For once, the dream he is catching is his own.
From Hermès to dream catcher
Miniou spent years as a director at Hermès, one of the most demanding schools of excellence in the luxury world. It was there that his “heart awakened to the beauty of the handmade”.
At the inception of his practice, two convictions shaped his vision. The first was that he had fallen deeply in love with craftsmanship — not as an aesthetic preference but as a near-physical compulsion. The second was that the wealthiest people in the world were quietly, persistently unfulfilled.
“I realised that there was this demand from wealthy people to have pieces, experiences, that could be crafted only for them — very unique pieces,” he says.
He did not set out to fill that gap so much as step into it. Les Ateliers Victor was founded more than 15 years ago on a philosophy that is disarmingly simple: find out what someone truly wants — even when they cannot articulate it themselves — and bring it into existence.
“I just say I’m a dream catcher,” he says. “I go into your heart, into your soul, and seek out what you really want. Sometimes you don’t even know what you want, or it’s hard to express, so I go dig in and search for it.”
Benoît Miniou sketching
What emerges from that process has ranged from the intimate to the genuinely extraordinary. He has created what is believed to be the first functioning pistol crafted using moon rock. He has built bespoke furniture that encodes entire family histories — materials, engravings and hidden compartments carrying meaning only their owners fully understand. He has conceived haute joaillerie where each stone and setting maps a personal chronology: milestones, memories, symbols known only to the wearer. He has engineered treasure hunts in which the first clue is hidden inside the object itself.
Each project, he insists, involves rigorous research, collaboration with leading scientists or master artisans, and a philanthropic dimension. “I don’t want anybody to say, ‘Okay, yes, it’s pretty, but so what?’ I want it to be real. If we send a rose to space, then there is a scientific aspect. It’s not just a very beautiful poetry project. There is hard, strong science behind it.”
A rendering of a titanium case inspired by le Louvre’s Egyptian Department
The art of listening
What makes Miniou different from a luxury concierge or a bespoke craftsman is something harder to define — an almost clinical ability to hear what is not being said.
He describes a client who came to him wanting an exceptional gift for his wife’s birthday. The man was well-intentioned but verbally opaque. “He couldn’t, by nature, give me anything personal about his wife. Then something slipped out: during lockdown, his wife had loved puzzles. She had forced him to play them, and he had hated every moment.
“I said, ‘Guy, you know what? That’s it.'”
What emerged was a party in which every guest arrived carrying a single piece of a puzzle. Together, assembled across the evening, the pieces formed an image close to the wife’s heart — meaningful only as a whole, each fragment alone carrying nothing. “You find the importance in the details that perhaps a lot of people would not necessarily see for themselves,” he reflects.
A custom trunk created for a pop icon and inspired by one of her songs and the Lion King
There is also the cigar trunk. A young woman came to him wanting something personal, something extraordinary. During their conversations, he sensed a particular closeness with her mother. A traditional hygrometer — the humidity gauge at the heart of any serious cigar cabinet — functions because of a simple physical fact: human hair expands and contracts with moisture, and that movement drives the dial. “It could be random hair,” Miniou told her. “Or it could be your mother’s hair.”
She is the only one who knows. Every time she opens that trunk, the connection is there.
What surprised him most in those early years was the emotional weight of the moment of delivery. Clients who had spent lifetimes acquiring extraordinary things were, on occasion, moved to tears. “I wasn’t expecting this,” he says.
A leather sculpture of Snoopy specially commissioned for the NASA Administrator
His most audacious unrealised concept — one he describes as his “crazy” idea — involves a marriage proposal in which the fiancée watches a live feed of a rover on the moon approaching a small greenhouse containing a rose, with the words “Would you marry me?” engraved inside. The code to unlock the ring box is, of course, the word ‘yes’.
“Don’t let anyone tell you your dreams are too big,” he says. “It’s a message I love to be able to spread.”
The rose and the princess
Princess Grace has been a presence in Miniou’s imagination for years. Through his membership of the Monaco Private Label and regular visits to the Principality with clients, he began to build relationships with Monaco’s institutions and government. He started sharing a dream — a passion project, the kind he almost never allows himself.
“Normally, I go into your heart and soul to seek what you really want,” he says. “For once, I decided I would like to catch my own dream.”
Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene at this year’s Galaxy themed Bal de la Rose with Princess Caroline of Hanover, Christian Louboutin, and members of the Princely Family. Photo source: Prince’s Palace
The project is this: the Meilland Princess de Monaco rose — the variety created in Princess Grace’s honour — will be sent into space, most likely aboard a SpaceX vehicle, with the International Space Station as an alternative depending on its operational timeline. The roses will spend between one month and six to eight months in orbit. They will not be grown in space; they will remain passive, exposed to conditions no rose has ever encountered in its evolutionary history.
“Microgravity is a stress the rose has never encountered in its entire history on Earth,” Miniou explains. “They experience differences of temperature, pressure, altitude — but the absence of gravity? Never. So by pushing them into this world where there is no gravity, they either die or they adapt.”
The scientific precedent gives him grounds for optimism. When grapevines were sent to space in a previous experiment, they returned demonstrably more resilient. They had developed a natural resistance of approximately 90 per cent to mildew — a disease that ordinarily requires heavy chemical treatment to suppress. Scientific papers have since been published on the results. Miniou expects analogous outcomes for the roses.
“If it works for roses, maybe it works for pears, apples, apricots. So poetic and scientific.”
The concept was explained and displayed during the Bal de la Rose Galaxy 2026 event
The roses are currently held in laboratory conditions in Germany, where they have been studied for over a year to establish baseline data. When they return from orbit, Miniou’s scientific team will examine what has occurred at the DNA, genomic and microbiological levels. Some of the surviving roses will be planted in significant gardens around the world — possibilities under discussion include the Robert Louis Stevenson School in Pebble Beach, California, and the Villa Albertine in New York, where a sculpture of Le Petit Prince now stands outside the library. In his most cherished scenario, one of the returned roses might eventually be planted in the Princess Grace Rose Garden in Monaco, where Prince Rainier III created it in her memory after her death in 1982.
Miniou emphasises that all resulting scientific data will be publicly accessible. “I want this research to belong to the world—to allow it to flourish, freely and without constraint,” he says.
The Bal de la Rose and a princess’s legacy
Grace Kelly inspires Miniou in ways that go beyond the botanical. She was an Oscar-winning actress who became a princess; an American who became Monaco’s most internationally recognisable figure; a woman of genuine cultural conviction who used her position in service of art, children and humanitarian causes. “She inspires us, even to this day,” he says simply.
It was therefore significant when Princess Caroline of Monaco indicated that this year’s Bal de la Rose — the annual gala held in support of the Princess Grace Foundation, one of the most storied events in Monaco’s calendar — would take its theme from the rose-in-space project. Designer Christian Louboutin transformed the evening into something galactic.
A rendering of the 2026 Bal de la Rose Galaxy Gala with the description of the rose in space project
The connection with Princess Grace feels, to him, not incidental but essential to the project’s spirit. “She loved roses. That’s why the Bal de la Rose is named after her passion for them. That’s why several roses are named after her. That’s why Prince Rainier created the rose garden to honour her memory.” Sending those roses into the sky she once admired carries, for Miniou, a weight that no brief can adequately capture, and sharing the scientific results with the world is what, he says, Princess Grace would be proud of.
A table crafted in titanium lace, intricately depicting the map of Paris
Alone in the field
Asked whether anyone else does what he does, Miniou pauses. “So far, I think I’m the only one. I haven’t met anybody doing it.”
It is a statement that sounds implausible until you spend time understanding what the work actually involves: the years at Hermès, the scientific collaborators, the Egyptologists and ballistic engineers and master jewellers and space agency contacts accumulated over a decade and a half, the emotional intelligence required to make someone open up in ways they never have before, and the sheer nerve to return, each time, without knowing whether it will work.
“It’s like a high-level athlete — each time you go back on the field, you put your crown in the field and say, ‘Will I get it back or not?'” he says. “So far, each time, I have.”
Somewhere in a laboratory in Germany, a Princess Grace rose waits in careful cold, studied and measured, ready for a journey no rose has ever made. The dream catcher, for once, is catching his own dream — and taking it to space.