Archive for November, 2001

2001 Chicago: Nancy Worden

Lend Me Your EarsArt lovers often ask artists, “Where do your images come from?” At SOFA 2001 artist Nancy Worden, wearing a vintage dress given to her by her grandmother, treated attendees to a 30 year chronology of her creative influences and creative output.Worden credited the encouragement of her family and the mentorship of vspace=”5″ hspace=”5″ influential instructors with fostering her youthful creative urges. She grew up in small-town Ellensburg, Washington where her art-loving parents were professors at Central Washington University. In her family, though, it was her grandmother’s love of “nice things” that inspired her deep appreciation for jewelry.

Silence Is GoldenNancy’s creative life as a studio jeweler began when she was a gifted high school student taking college classes from Professor Ken Cory at C.W.U., who reluctantly allowed her to take his class and whose program was significantly influenced by Ramona Solberg and Don and Merrily Tompkins. Cory challenged her to explore concept and meaning in her jewelry design. Cory’s mentorship grew into a deep friendship. After his untimely death, Worden curated a major retrospective exhibition and co-authored a publication of Cory’s work.

Worden credits University of Georgia master craftsman Gary Noffke with stregthening her technical competence and teaching her to work intuitively. She credits the years she spent at a jewelry store bench with instilling the ability to work quickly.

Exosquelette # 2While working for the Northwest Folk Life Festival, Nancy was exposed to a multitude of cultural forms of costume and adornment. Across all cultures jewelry is a personalized art form used to communicate real or desired status, commemorate significant achievements, events or rites of passage. She credits this experience with motivating her to work in a more personal and narrative style, to creatively assert the relationship between her artistic expression and her cultural context as a contemporary American woman. Her work demonstrates an ability to articulate her life experiences, deep curiosities and heartfelt passions while simultaneously striking a universal chord among an appreciative audience.

Today Worden’s career is that of a relevant and established artist with a master’s ability to deliver cultural commentary. A retrospective of her work is coming in 2008 to the Tacoma Museum of Art. Her work is in major private and public collections in the U.S. and Europe and has been published in books and Ornament, Metalsmith, American Craft and Sculpture magazines. She lives in Seattle with her husband, daughter, and three cats.
To collectors she offers this advice: “Buy things you absolutely love, understand that you are a caretaker of the object, plan for a proper home for the work upon your demise, and most important — WEAR IT!

Contributed by AJF member Sally von Bargen

Click on images to get more information.

2001 Emerging Artist Winner: Mark D. Rooker

WalkingIn this second year of the award program, Mark was the winner out of an overall field of 39. “His brooches focus on social issues that affect us all: our obsessions about body image, sex, wealth and guns,” noted Mia McEldowney, independent curator, CERF trustee, who chaired the judging this year. She was joined in this task by Joanne Rapp, a craft consultant, Haystack trustee, and founding member of the Art Jewelry Forum; and Judy Bloomfield, another founding member who is also an American Crafts Council trustee and collector.