Updates from September, 2008

  • metalcyberspace 11:07 pm on September 16, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: Bruce Metcalf, , ,

    The Miniature Worlds of Bruce Metcalf
    Sept.28 – Dec.21, 2008
    Special Events on Sept.28, 2008:
    Bruce Metcalf Lecture: “Chapters in a Life of the Imagination” 2-3pm at the Palo Alto Art Center auditorium
    Public Preview 3-5pm
    The lecture and preview are free to the public; please call 650-329-2366 to RSVP for the lecture.

    A 120 page full-color exhibition catalogue is available.

    Curated by Signe Mayfield of PAAC, this first major exhibition of his work examines social, moral and political issues, many of which Metcalf has also raised in his essays. In this exhibition, diminutive size matters. Cast in silver or carved in wood, Metcalf’s vulnerable protagonists act out issues on the stage of miniature worlds. Some of his pieces serve dual lives as wearable brooches, where the protagonists venture into the world and engage the unsuspecting viewer with their stories and distinctive visual language. The exhibition also marks the premier of the United States tour slated for multiple venues through 2011, including the Mint Museum of Craft+Design in Charlotte, North Carolina; Bellevue Arts Museum in Bellevue, Washington; Fresno Art Museum in Fresno, California; Fuller Craft Museum in Brockton, Massachusetts; Arkansas Arts Center in Little Rock, Arkansas; and Racine Art Museum in Racine, Wisconsin.

     
  • metalcyberspace 4:43 am on September 15, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: Chris Darway,

    Action Jewelry by Chris Darway at Revere Academy of Jewelry Arts Sept.22-24, 2008

     
  • DAVIDE BIGAZZI the art of chasing & repousse' video clip

    metalcyberspace 4:30 am on September 15, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: , , metalsmithing video,

    DAVIDE BIGAZZI the art of chasing & repousse’ video clip

    Watch as he employs chasing and repousse’ to create his sterling silver “Olivo” plate.

     
  • The American Jewelry Design Council (AJDC) Announces 2009 New Talent Contest

    metalcyberspace 4:00 am on September 15, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: American Jewelry Design Council,

    AJDC Announces 2009 New Talent Contest
    The American Jewelry Design Council is accepting applications for its annual New Talent Contest.

    The winner is awarded a booth in the New Designer Gallery at the July Jewelers of America Show in New York City. The winner is the focus of extensive media attention. This high-profile competition has successfully launched the careers of past winners such as Zoltan David, Todd Reed, Sarah Graham and Brian Sholdt. The entire jewelry industry eagerly awaits the New York debut of the AJDC’s pick. In addition, the winner receives professional support from members of the AJDC on making the step to larger markets.

    The American Jewelry Design Council is a group of over thirty nationally prominent designers whose mission is to promote the art of jewelry. In coordination with the Jewelers of America, this contest has been a major annual success, each year presenting a single outstanding designer to national and international jewelry buyers.

    Applicants must be a designer/owner of a jewelry manufacturing business, produce in the United States and have never exhibited at a JA Show. Selection is based on originality, craftsmanship, innovation, marketability and cohesiveness. The names of all finalists are submitted to the JA selection committee for consideration as a candidate for the New Designer Gallery. Winner and finalists are honored at an awards ceremony during the show.

    Deadline for submission is January 15, 2009.
    For more information and/or to receive an application, visit ajdc.org or send a self-addressed stamped envelope to: Alan Revere AJDC Talent Contest Chairman 760 Market Street, Suite 900 San Francisco, CA 94102

     
  • metalcyberspace 3:35 am on September 15, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: Australian jewelers, , Flip Side, ,

    Flip Side: Jewelry from JamFactory at Velvet da Vinci Gallery
    Sept. 10 to Oct. 12, 2008

    Velvet da Vinci Gallery in San Francisco presents “Flip side: Jewelry from JamFactory”, a show featuring new work from eight established Australian jewelers. Sue Lorraine, Creative Director of the Metals Design Studio and curator of Flip side, explains that the intention of this exhibition was to push these artists into a new dimension of their work. “There is always more than one point of view, always several ways to look at something, from the back and the front, the inside and the outside, the upside and the downside, the safe side and the flip side.” However, instead of creating drastically new pieces for the exhibition, Lorraine found that their mature and assured practice has allowed them to push the boundaries of their everyday work. For the last 30 years, JamFactory Contemporary Craft and Design Centre, located in Southern Australia, has been a center for the design, production, exhibition and sale of work by leading and emerging Australian designers / makers.

    An exhibition catalog is available.
    The artists exhibiting in the show are: Alisa Dewhurst, Kath Inglis, Tassia Joannides, Sim Luttin, Sally Mahony, Lauren Simeoni, Belinda Newick, Melissa Turner.

    Tassia Joannides uses the common zipper as her medium. She has given this one-dimensional form body and substance. The armbands intentionally blur the boundaries between the inside and out. By unzipping and zipping they become part of the wearer, an intimate experience.

    Melissa Turner uses stainless steel to create fluid and soft forms of beauty. There is no front or back, no pin back, no pendant, no ring shank, only fluid forms. These forms stand as an act of defiance to the jewelry world, without a wearable function.

    Sally Mahony uses primarily stainless steel in her work. She manipulates the material to both extremes, making it corrode and shine to a satiny, seductive black. The brooches peel away from the body exposing fabric or metal beneath.

    Kath Inglis again is a manipulator of materials. She carves PVC into three-dimensional wearable sculptures. Kath is inspired by the colors of shadows and reflections in water. Just as water has no top or bottom, no starting or ending point, her jewelry is a continuous ripple on the wearer.

    Lauren Simeoni’s brooches reflect the impact materials have on the world. She is a lover of materials and the impact these material leave. In this series of brooches she has printed nostalgic images on aluminum and reveals a time of personal innocence.

    Sim Luttin made this body of work while recently living in the U.S. As a visitor she was hyper-aware of her surroundings. Her necklaces reflect and magnify nature with their seed-like forms as vessels strung from dark beads.

    Alisa Dewhurst and Belinda Newick have used the body as their starting points. Alisa crochets necklaces illustrating the repetitive genetic message of DNA, the building material that makes up each individual. She mimics this process in crocheted wire. Belinda uses the necklace to discuss the fragility, fertility and fecundity of the female anatomy.

     
  • metalcyberspace 3:03 am on September 15, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: Fred Fenster, , ,

    Fred Fenster: Metalsmithing, Collected and Created

    Exhibition at Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne,  February 4-29, 2008

    video clip of the exhibition

    Thanks to Robert Schroeder for sending this along!

     
  • metalcyberspace 2:29 am on September 15, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: , , , Sofia Björkman

    Home – Jewellery by Sofia Björkman at Platina Stockholm Sweden
    Exhibition runs until Oct. 4, 2008
    Home - Jewellery by Sofia Björkman
    “Where I live, all the houses are similar. The small houses in wood are called shoe cartons and are on the line along the streets of the suburb. All who live there have a house, a garden, a car, a grill and at least one inherited piece of jewellery.” Sofia Björkman

     
  • metalcyberspace 7:56 pm on September 14, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: , , plastic, resin

    The Art of Jewelry: Plastic & Resin: Techniques, Projects, Inspiration The Art of Jewelry: Plastic & Resin: Techniques, Projects, Inspiration by Debra Adelson 2008

     
  • metalcyberspace 5:22 pm on September 14, 2008 | 0 Permalink
    Tags: Avant-Garde jewelry, , Helen Drutt, , Ornament as Art

    Ornament as Art: Avant-Garde Jewelry from the Helen Williams Drutt Collection
    and even more info at Mintwiki

    This exhibition has now moved to:
    Mint Museum of Craft + Design , Charlotte, NC Aug. 16, 2008-Jan. 9, 2009

    After that it will be at:
    Tacoma Art Museum , Tacoma, Washington, June 20-Sept. 13, 2009

    Catalogue of the show:
    Ornament as Art: Avant-Garde Jewelry from the Helen Williams Drutt Collection
    Ornament as Art: Avant-Garde Jewelry from the Helen Williams Drutt Collection by Cindi Strauss 2007

    Previously at Audrey Jones Beck Building, Museum of Fine Arts , Houston, TX USA Sept. 23, 2007 – Jan. 21, 2008
    Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum March 14-July 6, 2008

     
  • metalcyberspace 2:49 pm on September 14, 2008 | 0 Permalink

    1st Annual JewelryMaker Faire – California Institute of Jewelry Training – Sept. 20, 2008 Carmichael CA USA

     
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