#contemporary jewelry

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Diamonds are for everyone by Ashley BuchananSterling silver ring with tension fit diamond button.The

Diamonds are for everyone by Ashley Buchanan

Sterling silver ring with tension fit diamond button.

The diamonds are removable and able to be replaced with other gemstone buttons.
Diamond images are taken from jewelry ads in a fashion magazines, each button is one of a kind.

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Rings by Murky.When i die my body does not die with me. It awaits and transforms with the spreadinRings by Murky.When i die my body does not die with me. It awaits and transforms with the spreadin

Rings by Murky.

When i die my body does not die with me. It awaits and transforms with the spreading paleness of stiffness. Like an arctic winter landscape each day draws closer and closer to the state of frozen.

The process of rigidity does not subdue until the final state in reached: stillness.

The body remembers its movement. 


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Sue Ellen is Fine by  Helen Clara Hemsley 2011

Sue Ellen is Fine by  Helen Clara Hemsley

2011


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Beautiful Beast designed by Martín Azúa and made by the jeweller Roc Majoral. When I was a child IBeautiful Beast designed by Martín Azúa and made by the jeweller Roc Majoral. When I was a child IBeautiful Beast designed by Martín Azúa and made by the jeweller Roc Majoral. When I was a child I

Beautiful Beast designed by Martín Azúa and made by the jeweller Roc Majoral.

 When I was a child I observed with placid terror how spiders manipulated their prey. A ritual as relentless as refined that i have tried to reproduce in a piece of jewelry. Normally jewels are kind objects, but in this case they have a different role; it is something dangerous to be handled with great care. It is a golden spider with 8 very sharp flexible legs. A temporal piercing which incorporates pain as an unavoidable aspect of the jewel. The process of fastening is almost surgical, the skin is disinfected, it is applied and it is removed with a small mechanical artefact. The process is not free of danger and pain. Beauty hurts and requires an act of bravery and submission. The jewel possesses and controls you as the spider with its prey.

Repulsion and fascination, the insects have exercised a strange fascination in the jewellers of all the epochs.


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Nostril - for Barbara Seidenaht´s Nose - by Gerd Rothman Gold  1985“An unconventional dialog

Nostril - for Barbara Seidenaht´s Nose - by Gerd Rothman

Gold 

1985

“An unconventional dialogue with the human body”

Since he began designing jewelry over 40 years ago, goldsmith Gerd Rothman has incorporated cast part of the human body into his practice. His tactile pieces are custom-made and individualised to an hyper-specific part of his client´s body.


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Necklace by Sonobe Etsuko  18 k gold and pearls  2002

Necklace by Sonobe Etsuko 

18 k gold and pearls 

2002


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Necklace by Fritz Mahierhofer Aluminiun, anodized in green. 2011Necklace by Fritz Mahierhofer Aluminiun, anodized in green. 2011

Necklace by Fritz Mahierhofer

Aluminiun, anodized in green.

2011


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Sugar necklace by Liesbet Bussche

Sugar necklace by Liesbet Bussche


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Fold Bracelets by Emmy Van Leersum Stainless steel  1968Fold Bracelets by Emmy Van Leersum Stainless steel  1968

Fold

Bracelets by Emmy Van Leersum

Stainless steel 

1968


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“This was 2007” by Silke Fleischer The entire inventory of standarized everyday objects

“This was 2007” by Silke Fleischer

The entire inventory of standarized everyday objects that inspire me are displayed: an open book.

The significance of this passion of objects types is exploring what is around me and effect me. The jewellery piece appears to celebrate these object as a materialisation of pure form. It feels like creating a new reality, a scene, that becomes a medium for human contemplation, presiding to show us something: Yourself in your world.

“…ordinary objects of daily life appear to interest him fist and foremost as exemplification of this theory of simple bodies that tigger off universal sensations. …These objects were now chosen merely for reasons of plasticity. They server as illustrations of another point of view… : The theory of figurative associations in art. ”

Le Corbusier Elements of Synthesis - Objects types to objects á réaction poétique


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S.O.L. by Ariane Ernst Stainless steel gold-plated 2013s.o.l. is the shortcut for “symbols o

S.O.L. by Ariane Ernst

Stainless steel gold-plated

2013

s.o.l. is the shortcut for “symbols of life” and stands for the route of life. in general, life does not run smoothly. Depending on how you live your own life and which decisions you make it does not turn out like first imagined, each individual is different, some have the tendency to embark impulsively to something new and enjoy life to the fullest, others again don‘t like to look left or right because they enjoy their life‘s like it is and might be afraid of changes or you are the type of person who experiences always the same things and happened to spin in circles. the issue is now: in which of the 16 forms do you retrieve your own way of life? 


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Diamond Shot by David Roux-Fouillet

“Everyday Clips” brooches by Kajsa Lindberg 2008“Every day I´ve been working on

“Everyday Clips” brooches by Kajsa Lindberg

2008

“Every day I´ve been working on the routines and the rituals of everyday life. The system of repeats and symbols that we inhabit and need. I´m always collecting things to come into the contact with - things that say something to me…”


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Self by Annegret Soltau Needle and thread 1975- 76 “For me it is important to gain more auth

Self by Annegret Soltau

Needle and thread

1975- 76 

“For me it is important to gain more authenticity and directness through self-representation, but is even more important, than i can go farthest with myself”.


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Momentary Jewelry by Dang and Nhat-Vu Dang

#carboard    #release    #dang and nhat-vu dang    #momentary    #jewellery    #contemporary jewelry    #neckalce    #confetti    #dannad    
Scholderpiece by Gijs Bakker 1967 Photography Rien Bazen

Scholderpiece by Gijs Bakker

1967

Photography Rien Bazen


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Magnifying brooch by Maria Hess

Magnifying brooch by Maria Hess


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Do it yourself Jewelry Kit by Ted Noten This kit contains all the ingredients to make a nice piece oDo it yourself Jewelry Kit by Ted Noten This kit contains all the ingredients to make a nice piece o

Do it yourself Jewelry Kit by Ted Noten

This kit contains all the ingredients to make a nice piece of jewellery

925 silver matte, 2 white metal safety locks


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Fragmentures by Anne Kranenborg Necklaces 2013The transience of a material determines the finitene

Fragmentures by Anne Kranenborg

Necklaces

2013

The transience of a material determines the finiteness of the product.

This object obtains its function as a useful product by making a step towards transience.

One must break the necklace in several peaces before it becomes a unique and wearable object, fit for individual purposes.


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If I could fuck a mountain 
Lord I would fuck a mountain 
And I’d do it with a woman in the valley 
(Palace Brothers: The Mountain Low)

Contemporary jewellery is dead. It crashed right before our eyes. See how it now hangs from the wall of the gallery, bent, broken, rigor mortis setting in. Protected by the stylized gravediggers of the art world, on display in is transparent coffin, the stench of rot swirling safely behind the glass.
The obituary, comme il faut, is subtly disguised as an invitation or included in a catalogue, sustaining the semblance of life a little while longer. 
At the appointed time the crowd, elegant as always, swoops into the great hall to grace the official ceremony with its presence. Glasses are raised in memory of the deceased, astute analyses exchanged, the lack of recognition lamented. It seems as if everyone, excepting of course those who faithfully attend the High Mass of contemporary jewellery design, is visually impaired. 
As the jewellery piece was being nailed to the wall it had let rip one last cry for help. Just when everything was going so well, fate had struck. 
The visual arts just within reach, cruising round the next bend right in front of it instead of the usual full lap ahead. Almost bumper to bumper… 
All it needed was the extra spurt in a game of catch up that had started somewhere in the heroic nineteen sixties. What hadn’t it done in the intervening years to fall into the good graces of its devotees? Its reputation as plaything of the rich finally cast off, its abstraction embraced, only to be swiftly replaced by the lyricism of the individual artist railing against the dictate of good taste. Museums had become an accepted podium and jewellery decided the time was ripe to celebrate its worth in all its godforsaken vanity once more. 
In the pursuit of a place amongst the visual arts, jewellery design had reinvented itself aplenty and now finally the finish was in sight. Justice at last, mission accomplished: game over. But along the way it had become so fixated on acquiring status that it had lost its purpose and hence control over the wheel. The struggle for emancipation had become its ultimate goal. Then the crash came. And now here it hangs on the wall of the gallery like an X-ray of a cardiac arrest. It nestles in its glass case, oblivious to the fact that it already stopped breathing on the workbench of its maker. 

Contemporary jewellery is an illusion. As artificial, as the stories told by the scribes, who, with their apologias try to invest a whiff of credibility. 
By appealing to the uniqueness of every single creation process, they try to justify its existence; not just of one piece in particular or of a designer’s entire oeuvre but of the discipline as a whole. They tirelessly advocate a myth. In their hands, every piece of jewellery is interpreted as something without precedent. It’s a one-off, singular and brilliant - the work of a genius. And yet it simultaneously turns into a pars pro toto. 
Their pens scour the brains of the true bearers of the Word: the artists who tend to intuit what a particular jewellery piece should tell if it is to fulfil its ambition of the new. Personal fear, euphoria and associations form the uncompromising basis from which jewellery will stir towards a new meaning. These are the stories recorded by the chroniclers of jewellery, like telegraphers of the holy above. Take them at their world and you will find yourself dangling from a very thin rope. It seems as if the world of jewellery design is created anew every day and with every invention the truth of that world becomes a little more definitive. 
They avow a dogmatic faith in the incessant urge of contemporary jewellery design to be innovative, but forty years on in this alleged revolution their creationist stories can no longer conceal the epileptic fit convulsing the heart of this discipline. Contemporary jewellery pieces are like Rotary badges. As functional and just as steeped in the conventions they once tried to undermine. They have become the shorthand gesture of recognition for those who speak the same language. A rusty code that only has value for the intimate few. 

Contemporary jewellery is autistic. It doesn’t read newspapers or books. Not out of principle but because of a lack of interest. It distrusts history as much as it wishes to sidestep reality. It cherishes and nurtures its own, often incomprehensibly cryptic language to avoid criticism, questions, comparison and even the smallest expression of doubt concerning its intentions. 
Entrenched behind a parapet of silence it resists criticism and refuses to engage with the banalities of daily reality. Sometimes with such virtuosity that the parapet itself takes on meaning; when the sublime silence develops an autonomous power that lifts the result over and above the natural boundaries of a particular jewellery piece. But as often as not, there reigns a petulant silence, like that of a child trying to get its own way, pursing its lips and with folded arms striking a stubborn pose. 
It’s a battle against parental authority that is lost up front because winning or losing in the end simply boils down to who has the longest breath. 

In its ambition to remove itself from any form of critical context, contemporary jewellery has only managed to further isolate itself. Not only from the art world, but from its public as well. It complains of a lack of attention, yet wilfully retreats into the shadows of provincial life. 
Here, in the safe isolation of the artist studio, passions that run high are hammered into every square millimetre of material and moulded into shape. That process, characteristic for the creation of every piece of jewellery for thousands of years was kept in balance by the astute awareness of its actual calling: as an accessory that ultimately expresses the aspirations and achievements of the wearer, not those of the designer. Yes, conventional, and yes, inevitably judged on craftsmanship but for that fact also recognisable and appreciated by the many. 
The goldsmith followed the market and was - depending on his talents and skills - able to influence the tastes and fashions of his time; in exceptional cases even successfully introducing an indelible signature that bore the hand of its maker.

Modern jewellery lost this simple logic along the way. Every designer started to believe him or herself to be that exceptional case. Each of their stories took precedence over that of the end user, the wearer. The maker’s signature no longer had to be proven, was no longer a priori under discussion, now that it was simultaneously the source and ultimate goal of every creation. This transformed the typically extrovert ornament of yore into a piece of almost completely introverted sculpture. It chose the gallery over the shop, the collection over the street, the conversation between friends over social interaction. 

Contemporary jewellery is superfluous. After all, what could it possibly contribute that other visual arts do not explore at least equally as well? Intimacy, unease, voyeurism, consolation, exuberance, silence, beauty…?
None of these belong exclusively to the domain of the jewellery designer. The moment the wearer was banished from the equation and the very social codes that had provided it with its most specific meaning were vilified contemporary jewellery gave up its raison d'etre. What followed was a turbulent but futile search for an emergency exit in a tunnel that just got darker and darker. Unless the self-inflicted isolation is radically abandoned, the discipline will have to settle for its position in the fringes of the fringes. Barely noticed and certainly unchallenged. Striving for a safe, because enemy-free existence that is thoroughly uninteresting since it is validated only by those few square inches necessary for its own conception. If it wants a chance of survival its maker will have to step out into more dangerous terrain. Return to his craft, if only to forget it. That means ditching forty years of dogma but getting in return centuries of conformism and defiance that will doubtlessly prove a far richer source.

Jewellery must be sentimental and never look for compromise. 
Jewellery must be owned by the public if it wants to touch the public. 
Jewellery must steal and seek to be stolen. 
Jewellery must cherish its enemies in order to make friends. 
Jewellery must forget the psychoanalysis of the studio. 
Jewellery must go out into the street to eat and be eaten. 
Jewellery must be shamelessly curious. 
Jewellery must look where to attack and neglect its defences. 
Jewellery must use traditional codes in order to break them. 
Jewellery must neither forgive nor forget. 
Jewellery must ignore all prescription. 


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“Celebration of the street: Manifesto for the new jewellery” co-authored by Ted Noten and Gerd Staal is a part of the book Ted Noten: CH2=C(CH3)C(=O)OCH3 enclosures and other TNs

Images used in this post are not property of CURRENT OBSESSION and belong to their rightful owners. If these images belong to you and you would like them removed, please contact us.
Fingertips Entrapment #2 by Natha Khunprasert“Caging sensation, Interrupting movement, Captu

Fingertips

Entrapment #2 by Natha Khunprasert

“Caging sensation,

Interrupting movement,

Capturing function”

The collection revolves around the ‘Fingertips’

Each piece concentrates on highlighting

the significance of the body part by challenging the sensation, the movement or the function.

Some designs enhance them while

the other entrap them.


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Domestic jewellery by Maisie Broadhead Plug & Overflow brooch Silver, rubber plug 2006 A collectDomestic jewellery by Maisie Broadhead Plug & Overflow brooch Silver, rubber plug 2006 A collect

Domestic jewellery by Maisie Broadhead

Plug & Overflow brooch

Silver, rubber plug

2006

A collection of silver jewellery giving the common and iconic designs of the english home a little moment of glory.


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Celebrate Yourself Neckalce by Marlous De Roode Latex ballons

Celebrate Yourself

Neckalce by Marlous De Roode

Latex ballons


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Work by Sussana Heron Images from a book about her bodywork exhibition at the Crafts Council 1980Work by Sussana Heron Images from a book about her bodywork exhibition at the Crafts Council 1980

Work by Sussana Heron

Images from a book about her bodywork exhibition at the Crafts Council

1980


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Soft shield by Galit Barak See trough fabric folded to create a soft, changing head shield. 2012

Soft shield by Galit Barak

See trough fabric folded to create a soft, changing head shield.

2012


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Gift from myself by Eunhyuk Choi Stainless steel, silver. 2011Gift from myself by Eunhyuk Choi Stainless steel, silver. 2011Gift from myself by Eunhyuk Choi Stainless steel, silver. 2011Gift from myself by Eunhyuk Choi Stainless steel, silver. 2011Gift from myself by Eunhyuk Choi Stainless steel, silver. 2011

Gift from myself by Eunhyuk Choi

Stainless steel, silver.

2011


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Jewelry Box with interchangeable geometric pendants by Herman Junger Gold cable, rock crystal, hemat

Jewelry Box with interchangeable geometric pendants by Herman Junger

Gold cable, rock crystal, hematite, red jasper, chalcedony, chrysoprase, lapis lazuli, agate, gold-plated silver. 

1987


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Geode by Paige Smith   “Geodes” in the city and the ones you find in nature have a parallel aspectGeode by Paige Smith   “Geodes” in the city and the ones you find in nature have a parallel aspectGeode by Paige Smith   “Geodes” in the city and the ones you find in nature have a parallel aspect

Geode by Paige Smith  

“Geodes” in the city and the ones you find in nature have a parallel aspect—they are unexpected treasures. You might go hunting for treasures but you generally happen upon them during your adventures or casual interaction with the environment. I enjoy the fact that many people will not notice these, but some astute people will; that these will not last forever and the weather will affect them as naturally as it might in nature.


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Seeing is believing? by Percy Lau Cristal clear resin, acrylic sheet and rodsSeeing is believing? by Percy Lau Cristal clear resin, acrylic sheet and rodsSeeing is believing? by Percy Lau Cristal clear resin, acrylic sheet and rods

Seeing is believing? by Percy Lau

Cristal clear resin, acrylic sheet and rods


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Flora Vagi - waves & flames brooch

Flora Vagi - waves & flames brooch


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