This essay examines how Italian Futurism could be converted into new cultural capital, transferred intooutjer countries and employed as a strategy in the early 1910s within the early Nordic avant-garde. Around the years 1910-101. the Italian artist Arturo Ciacelli (1883-1966) spent time in Paris in the circle of Robert and Sonia Delaunay before movint north with Elsa Ström, a Swedish artist he had married in 1909. Ciacelli sought to establish himself in Scandinavia not only as an artist, but also as an editor of the new journal Ny Konst (New Art, 1915) and as the director of a gallery for contemporary art. His Nya Konstgalleriet (New Art Gallery), founded in Stockholm in 1915, promoted Nordic and international avant-garde painting until 1921. Ciacelli's embrace of Futurism was less evident in his panterly work that in his theoretical statements, the most important of which was an incomplete translation of La pittura futurista: Manifesto tecnico (1910), based on the French edition of 1912 in the Berhheim-Jeune catalogue, entitled "Manifeste des peintres futuristes". The chapter presents Ciacelli's activities in Stockholm, Lund and Copnehagen, and discusses the artist's strategies for forestering trans-national migrations of avant-garde formations and discuss his Futurist-Målarnes Manifest of 1913.