Updates from September, 2008

  • metalcyberspace 3:44 pm on September 19, 2008 | 0 Permalink
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    Form & Function: American Modernist Jewelry, 1940-1970 Form & Function: American Modernist Jewelry, 1940-1970 – Marbeth Schon 2008

    This book is the catalog for two of the first major exhibits to show only modernist jewelry from such a broad group of artists. Both take place in 2008 in Fort Wayne, Indiana: one at The Fort Wayne Museum of Art (May 2 to Aug. 24, 2008) and the other at The University of St. Francis School of Creative Arts (May 2-30, 2008). Over fifty collectors and living art jewelers have lent some of the best examples of this innovative style. Sculptors Alexander Calder, Harry Bertoia, Jose de Rivera, Peter and Daniel Macchiarini, Earl and Tod Pardon, and Merry Renk are among the 96 artists featured, along with their extensive jewelry creations. Their work was experimental and stimulated originality in successive generations. Plastics, pearls, brass, copper, silver, gold, and enamels are among the materials found here in mini-sculptures and jewelry ornaments for men and women alike. The author’s extensive research uncovers connections among the artists and documents this important art period and medium. Artists, collectors, cultural historians, and students all will want to see the exhibits and own the catalog.

    Previously written by the same author is:
    Modernist Jewelry 1930-1960: The Wearable Art Movement Modernist Jewelry 1930-1960: The Wearable Art Movement – Marbeth Schon 2004

    This beautifully written book explores the work of 175 of the most important American modernist artist jewelers through a comprehensive text and over 540 color and 35 black and white photos. Beginning with the streamlining of Art Moderne, modernist jewelers mirrored the consciousness of their age. They were free thinkers artists who broke away from the mainstream of jewelry design and looked to the fine arts for inspiration; they were Surrealists, Cubists, and Abstract Expressionists functioning as sculptors in small scale, painters in enamels, and architects in miniature. The modernist metalsmiths of the 1930s through 1960s laid the groundwork for the enormous expansion of metalsmithing in the 1970s and ’80s. These creative jewelers produced personal designs as they absorbed the changes happening in the world around them. The artists’ stories and jewelry are arranged chronologically and linked to four pivotal exhibitions held at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, in 1946; the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, in 1948 and 1955; and an exhibition on paper in 1959. Together, the artists at these important events comprise the modernist movement of wearable art directly and through their influence on the subsequent generations. This important book will stand as the primary reference to art jewelry of the mid-20th century and be consulted by all who want to understand the innovations it embraces.

     
  • metalcyberspace 3:09 pm on September 19, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: , Art Smith, , , , ,

    From the Village to Vogue: The Modernist Jewelry of Art Smith
    at Brooklyn Museum, NY USA
    May 14, 2008 through May 17, 2009

    Exhibition of Silver Jewelry Designed by Legendary Modernist Jeweler Art Smith

    This exhibit will honor the gift of twenty pieces of silver and gold jewelry created by the Brooklyn-born modernist jeweler Arthur Smith (1917–1982), primarily from Charles Russell, Smith’s companion and heir.

    The presentation of Art Smith jewelry will be enhanced by archival material from the artist’s estate, including his working tools, the original shop sign designed by Smith, period photographs of models wearing his jewelry, preparatory sketches, and account books. Presented along with Smith’s work are twenty-three pieces of modernist jewelry from the permanent collection by such artists as Elsa Freund, William Spratling, Frank Rebajes, Eva Eisler, Ed Weiner, Claire Falkenstein, Jung-Hoo Kim, and others. Inspired by surrealism, biomorphicism, and primitivism, Art Smith’s jewelry is dynamic in its size and form. Although sometimes massive in scale, his jewelry remains lightweight and wearable due to his awareness of the female form. The jewelry dates from the late 1940s to the 1970s and includes his most famous pieces, such as a "Patina" necklace inspired by the mobiles of Alexander Calder; a "Lava" bracelet, or cuff, that extends over the entire lower arm in undulating and overlapping forms; and a massive ring with three semiprecious stones that stretches over three fingers.

    Trained at Cooper Union, Art Smith, an African American, opened his first shop on Cornelia Street in Greenwich Village in 1946. He later moved the business to 140 West Fourth Street, where it remained throughout his career. Not only one of the leading modernist jewelers of the mid-twentieth century, Smith was also an active supporter of black and gay civil rights, an avid jazz enthusiast, and a supporter of early black modern dance groups.

    This exhibition is organized by Barry Harwood, Curator of Decorative Arts, Brooklyn Museum. The exhibition is supported by the Harold S. Keller Fund with additional support from the Donald and Mary Oenslager Fund.

     
  • metalcyberspace 8:20 pm on September 18, 2008 | 0 Permalink
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    Edge of the Sublime: Enamels by Jamie Bennett
    Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art – NY Sept.27 – Nov.16 2008
    Opening reception: Friday, Sept.26, 2008 5-8pm

    Edge of the Sublime represents the first-ever retrospective of works by one of the most important enamelists working today. This exhibition explores the artist’s creative use and development of a variety of enameling and metalworking techniques to produce highly color-saturated imagery on signature brooches, necklaces and pendants. Curated by Jeannine Falino, former Carolyn and Peter Lynch Curator of Decorative Arts, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Edge of the Sublime debuted at Fuller Craft Museum in Massachusetts before traveling to the SDMA and museums nationwide through 2010.

    This exhibition will continue to travel to:
    Arkansas Art Center – AR Dec.19, 2008 – Feb.22, 2009
    Racine Art Museum – WI
    Bellevue Arts Museum – WA

    An exhibition catalog is available:
    Edge of the Sublime: Enamels by Jamie Bennett by Jeannine Falino 2008 Edge of the Sublime: Enamels by Jamie Bennett by Jeannine Falino 2008
    A beautifully illustrated catalogue of over 100 color plates, it addresses artist’s lifework who first established his international reputation in 1986 when he produced enameled jewelry using unique, electroformed shapes. Jeannine Falino is an independent curator who formerly curated at the MFA in Boston.

     
  • metalcyberspace 5:31 pm on September 18, 2008 | 0 Permalink
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    Elegant Armor: The Art of Jewelry

    Sept. 27, 2008 – May 31, 2009

    The Museum of Arts & Design in New York inaugurates the Tiffany & Co. Foundation Jewelry Gallery in its new home at 2 Columbus Circle with Elegant Armor: The Art of Jewelry. The exhibition offer visitors the unique opportunity to see an exceptional assembly of works from the Museum’s collection. The remarkably inventive artists extend the range of materials beyond precious gems and metals to demonstrate that they can make superb jewelry from paper, rubber, plastic, found objects of all descriptions and even pig’s intestines. Featuring over 200 objects from the pioneering works of the 1940s to the cutting edge pieces made this year, the exhibition provides a dazzling overview of the evolution of contemporary art jewelry.

     
  • metalcyberspace 2:44 am on September 18, 2008 | 0 Permalink
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    3rd Annual Intercollegiate Metals Exhibition

    Oct. 6-17, 2008 Mon.-Thurs. noon-5pm; Friday noon-3pm
    Opening Reception: Mon. Oct. 6, 2008 7-9pm
    Tickets: Free

    A national juried exhibition of jewelry and metalwork, selected and organized by Herberger College faculty member Becky McDonah and the Metals program in the School of Art, ASU Tempe, AZ USA

     
  • Goldsmiths' Fair 2008

    metalcyberspace 1:18 am on September 18, 2008 | 0 Permalink
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    Goldsmiths’ Fair 2008
    The annual selling exhibition of innovative jewellery and silverware by contemporary designer makers
    At Goldsmiths’ Hall, London EC2

    Week One – Sept.22-28, 2008
    Week Two – Sept.30-Oct.5, 2008
    Entrance by catalogue purchasable on the door – £6

    SUCCUMB TO temptation and be seduced by the sparkling range of designer jewellery and stunningly original silverware on sale at the annual Goldsmiths’ Fair. Now in its 26th year, the Fair is the country’s leading showcase for contemporary works in precious metals by artist designer makers, and a total of 160 will travel to London from all round the country to dazzle visitors with their latest creations. Let the makers weave their magic as they explain their craft. Listen as they describe what influences their designs, how and where they source their stones and what skills and wizardry they use to transform gold and silver into exquisite works of art for adornment and pure pleasure. Buying directly from the maker instantly becomes so much more enjoyable and personal. Function and aesthetics are fused into a stunning range of silver dishes, bowls, vases, jugs, flatware, candlesticks, boxes and table decorations and all manner of objects to complement and enhance stylish contemporary living.

    Goldsmiths’ Fair is not only about established talent but is also about talent spotting! Ten young graduates make their professional debut with the help of a bursary and a free stand from the Goldsmiths’ Company which enables them to get started.

    A selection of designer-makers exhibiting over the two weeks:
    Barbara Christie, Ornella Iannuzzi, Christine Kaltoft, David McCaul, Ming, David Miracca, Tom Rucker, Bobby White, Frances Levis, Louise Loder, Olivia Lowe, Shona Marsh

     
  • metalcyberspace 1:15 am on September 18, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: Charles Lewton-Brain, foldforming, , , ,

    Foldforming by Charles Lewton-Brain 2008

    Foldforming by Charles Lewton-Brain

    The ultimate reference on foldforming from the artist who invented this groundbreaking approach to working with metal. By taking advantage of the inherent qualities of the material, foldforming develops organic forms in metal with minimum effort. Hundreds of sequential photographs demonstrate techniques to make a wide range of forms. Foldforming lends itself to all branches and levels of metalsmithing, from jewelry to blacksmithing, beginners to advanced artists.

    Charles Lewton-Brain received his initial training in Germany and later earned a Master of Fine Arts from SUNY New Paltz. In the 1980s he invented a way of working with metal that exploits its inherent behaviors. Through hundreds of workshops and in his position at the Alberta College of Art + Design, Charles has developed the science and art of foldforming to its current high standard.

     
  • metalcyberspace 3:48 am on September 17, 2008 | 0 Permalink
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    Rolling Mill Workshop – Oct.25, 2008 9am-4pm at Whaley Studios – San Diego, CA USA

    Workshop Topics

    •  Alloying jewelry metals
    •  How to alloy different colors and karats of gold from 24K and pre-mixed alloys, and making sterling silver from fine silver and copper or S88 alloy.
    •  Strategies for selecting and adjusting ingot molds for correct sized finished wire and sheet stock.
    •  Melting and pouring ingots with a torch.
    •  Care and maintanance of rolling mills.
    •  Making basic square wire stock.
    •  Making a true square, rectangular wire, bezel stock, tapering wire for the drawplate.
    •  Correct annealing of wire and sheet stock, coiling and wrapping for annealing wire.
    •  Upsetting rectangular stock for narrowing.
    •  Reshaping larger wire shapes into smaller wire forms.
    •  Using the mill to make sheet stock “dead flat”.
    •  Using drawplates to make wire stock.
    •  How to straighten wire.
    •  Assorted rolling mill tricks for making fancy stock.
    •  Roller printing with assorted materials.
     
  • metalcyberspace 1:12 am on September 17, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: , , Dieter Roth, , , Ringe 1959–1973

    Dieter Roth’s Rings
    through 5 Oct. 2008 at MUDAC

    The Swiss creator Dieter Roth (1930–1998) worked on innumerable fronts, trying out multiple materials and techniques. He was a remarkable dabbler in many things: at one and the same time painter, graphic artist, designer, sculptor, creator of installations, poet, musician, filmmaker and organiser of his own exhibitions. The scope of his interests and his artistic research was such that Dieter Roth is unique and, indeed, unclassifiable. His work often leaped from one discipline to another, while some of his works decomposed naturally because they were made from chocolate, cheese or meat. The proliferation and originality of his interventions and his works have left a lasting mark on the most recent generations of artists.

    In 1957, Dieter Roth decided to settle with his wife in Iceland, which very quickly became his adopted homeland. Following the birth of their three children, in order to meet his family’s needs, the artist went on to experiment in very diverse fields: he built furniture, designed a shelving system for a pharmacist, developed new pieces for chess (a very highly regarded game in Iceland), designed posters and produced work in ceramics and glass. In parallel he became interested in making jewellery, which he thought he could sell easily. These creations were totally innovative and burst the norms of traditional jewellery. Thus his bracelets were based on salvaged aluminium plates on to which he poured chemical products; he would wait two or three weeks until a form of oxidisation was produced and then cut out strips of metal. His early days as a jeweller were very laborious. Icelanders did not recognise the originality of his experimental work, which broke down the barriers between different areas of skills. The meeting in 1958 with his fellow countryman, the goldsmith Hans Langenbacher, marked a turning point in his production. A long, fruitful collaboration grew out of this friendship, which would last until the artist’s death, as the abundant correspondence presented at the mudac this summer will testify.

    Hans Langenbacher was instantly fascinated by the freedom of expression of the jewellery designed by Dieter Roth, the audacity of the materials employed and their ingenious system of assemblage. The artist used to try out various combinations of bolts, nuts and screws, propose new components to add, cover or remove. This incredible series of sculptures for fingers, or ring-sculptures, was based on rather ordinary materials such as gilt brass, iron and coloured plexiglass. Dieter Roth even went further, including the eventual wearers of his jewellery in the creation of their own ring. They could modify the ring as they pleased by combining or replacing certain components, thereby creating a unique object. The dialogue of the artist with the person who would wear the object is a central theme in Dieter Roth’s work. The series of rings produced by Dieter Roth includes some very special models such as the “Ring with rotating components” (1971), permitting the wearer to play with 15 different settings, the four “Lion rings” (1971) inspired by the Lion Monument in Lucerne, and the “Zoo ring” (1971) made up of toys in the form of interchangeable animal heads.

    The exhibition presents six ring-sculpture models with multiple combinations permitting 40 different rings to be made, as well as 70 original documents prefiguring these projects. Drawings, sketches, letters and postcards sent by Dieter Roth to Hans Langenbacher allow one to follow, step by step, the collaboration between artist and goldsmith. All the objects come from the private collection of Hans Langenbacher (Lucerne).

    Parallel to this project, Edizioni Periferia (Lucerne) is publishing in German and English the book Dieter Roth, Ringe 1959–1973, which includes photographs by Harry Burst of the various ring projects, with previously unpublished texts by Jean-Christophe Ammann, Hans Langenbacher and Flurina Paravicini, Adalsteinn Ingolfsson and Peter Noever. As the goldsmith Hans Langenbacher placed his archives at the publisher’s disposal, all the original documents relating to this collaboration have been reproduced in facsimile and gathered together in a loose-leaf file in a limited edition of 750. There is also a leader edition (15 numbered copies) incorporating an example of the “Lucerne lion ring” in silver.

     
  • metalcyberspace 12:31 am on September 17, 2008 | 0 Permalink
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    From Hand to Hand: passing on skill and know-how in European contemporary jewellery
    From Hand to Hand: passing on skill and know-how in European contemporary jewellery

    through Oct.5, 2008 at MUDAC

    Special events:
    Lecture by Karl Fritsch
    Karl Fritsch, jewellery-maker, talks about his work. Sept.23, 2008 at HEAD / Boulevard James-Fazy 15, 1201 Geneva, free entrance.
    Lecture by Karen Pontoppidan
    A lecturer at Ädellab, Konstfack, Stockholm, Karen Pontoppidan talks about the transmission of knowledge. Oct.3, 2008 at MUDAC

    Via a selection of jewellery by European creators, the exhibition “from hand to hand” seeks to define the bonds that are created between teachers and pupils and what is involved in passing on a skill or knowledge. European jewellers whose influence in the contemporary jewellery world is clearly established and recognised were therefore chosen, not just because they are eminent teachers but also because they are outstanding creators of their period. What influences have they had on their pupils? What do they hope to pass on? What have their pupils retained of this? And do the latter, some of whom have become teachers in their turn, have the feeling they are continuing a link in the chain?

    Contemporary jewellery
    In our Western societies, technical virtuosity acquired in a traditional manner in workshops or professional schools allows the making of jewellery that unites prestige with market value. Nevertheless, since the 1970s, the world of contemporary jewellery creation has questioned these values. So does this knowledge still have any meaning? Is it not the idea transmitted via the object that is of prime importance? In observing the selected pieces, made by the creators themselves, one realises that both these factors co-exist: manual skill remains very evident in as much as these pieces of jewellery testify to the attention paid to ensuring they are well made, a judicious choice of materials, a genuine pleasure in producing a beautiful object. But this manual skill is placed at the service of the expression of each individual’s private questionings. It is this combination that makes contemporary jewellery so fascinating. One can allow oneself to feast one’s eyes while enjoying a pleasant sensation of intellectual titillation. Benjamin Lignel, jeweller and art historian, has set out a number of common characteristics of contemporary jewellery. He underlines “notions of individuality, craftmanship, and its troubled relationship to the production mainstream.” And adds the following elements: “the human body as a general working area; an open attitude to methods and material that echoes art’s own agenda, complicated by the notion of wearability; […] and an emancipation from consumer goods’ vocation to ‘just’ satisfy consumer desires.” [In Metalsmith Magazine, autumn 2006]. These are a few of the facets which allow one to define better the preoccupations of contemporary jewellery creators.

    Europe
    Apart from a few isolated examples, it would be difficult in Europe to find a school that is characterised by its territorial roots. The majority of European jewellery schools and colleges have developed an international style, based rather more on the identity of the creator than on his or her origin. Ever since the 1980s–1990s, Europe has represented a crucible for the creation of contemporary jewellery. Students still come from all over the world to undergo training here. Creators who have passed through European schools are consequently right in the centre of the reflections that prevail in the contemporary jewellery field.

    Ties and links
    To define more closely the relationships that exist between the exhibition’s participants, the latter responded to a questionnaire regarding the transmission of skills and knowledge. Their answers echo their creations in the exhibition as well as in the catalogue. Thus, all the jewellers relate their experiences during their years of training; their relationship with their teacher(s); who pushed them, who supported or discouraged them; who they still remember several years later; how there was a certain amount of connivance. Some pupils, having become masters in their turn, are continuing an artistic process that was developed under the influence of their teachers. Fabrice Schaefer, who teaches at the Haute école d’art et de design in Geneva, says: “‘Transforming a material’ was at the heart of Esther [Brinkmann]’s teaching; I still work along those lines”. Others, on the contrary, claim to have broken with them completely: “I think that I have never been faithful to my teacher. We have completely different ways of facing our craft and making jewellery.” (Marc Monzó, Spain, 1973).

    The exhibition
    The exhibition brings together works by 58 jewellery-makers of 3 generations (12 masters, 39 pupils, 7 pupils of pupils) who have emerged from 10 schools in various countries: Germany, Spain, Finland, France, Great Britain, Italy, Netherlands, Portugal and Switzerland. It is organised around the first-generation teachers, with the addition of their pupils and, in some cases, the pupils of their pupils. The tradition that the Swiss are great travellers is confirmed here: of the 17 Swiss jewellers included, 5 of whom currently teach abroad, 5 pursued complementary training outside Switzerland before returning home.

    The choice of pieces was carried out in agreement with the creators. The majority of the works date from the last five years. In a few cases they are older because they are emblematic of the work of particular teachers. Each creator has the same module at his/her disposal, without any sort of hierarchy: a trolley on wheels offering a presentation area of around 1m2. This display option conveys the very great mobility of jewellery creators: both the teachers who move around giving workshops and the pupils who follow the teacher of their choice.

    Despite every effort on the scenographer’s part, a piece of jewellery presented in a display case is nothing but a miniature sculpture. It lacks its natural support, the body. To compensate for this absence from the exhibition, some of the jewellery pieces are also shown being worn by means of black-and-white photographs taken by students of the Ecole de Photographie in Vevey (CEPV).

    The exhibition’s organisation and scenography were undertaken by Carole Guinard, jewellerymaker and scenographer at the MUDAC.

     
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