Exhibitions

Golden Clogs, Dutch Mountains

Edited for the AJF website
Reprinted courtesy of Andrea Wagner (curator)

The “Golden Clogs, Dutch Mountains” exhibition was initiated by the Velvet da Vinci Gallery, which was also the first venue for the exhibition, and is now traveling to five other galleries in the U.S. and Canada.

I’m curator of Golden Clogs, Dutch Mountains as well as a studio jeweller in Amsterdam

gray-02.jpgFor Golden Clogs, Dutch Mountains I chose artists who have graduated and emerged within roughly the last twelve years. I wanted to present strong innovative work that communicates with powerful visual language. My choice also went out for work in which material itself conveys the story, work that consciously uses the emotional value of materiality.

It may not be quite as well-known to a larger public as its bigger (design) sibling, but contemporary jewelry from the Netherlands has and is continually, making a name for itself internationally.

reddish-br.jpgNow, jewelry today isn’t pared down to quite the same extent, but it definitely shares the same mentality of not becoming cluttered. Because jewelry’s intrinsic nature is adornment, this obviously automatically invites a much wider and more thorough use of materials. Dutch jewelry artists, though, tend to make very conscious choices in order to prevent, as it were, the sort of detracting - what I’d describe as visual background noise — that a piece would exude if the maker would just go on an uncontrolled decoration binge. So it’s mainly about making clear decisions, decisions on which material and technique would be the strongest in transmitting a story or concept. Actually a kind of “Less is more” attitude.

ManonVnKouswijk__HeartBea_01.jpgIt was only pretty much in the later stages of compiling this lecture that I realized something interesting to an extent that I hadn’t quite expected. There is one very outstanding factor in which this generation differs strongly from the ones before. It’s the proof of fading geographical boundaries. Many of the artists in this exhibit aren’t originally Dutch.

So I suppose this automatically raises the question: are we still talking about Dutch jewelry design here or not?

Of course, it must be taken into consideration that - with one single exception - all of these artists had their academic studies at the Amsterdam (Gerrit) Rietveld Academy, and with that training does come a certain kind of design mentality.

These artists now live and work in the Netherlands contributing towards some of the most interesting work that Dutch avantgarde jewelry design has to offer today, and I strongly believe that this has even given the field additional exiting impulses.

It will certainly be interesting to see what this melting-pot of cultural influences continually converging with the Dutch mentality shall be opening up to in the future!

And now, the actual participants of GOLDEN CLOGS, DUTCH MOUNTAINS:

Iris Eichenberg - German-born graduated 1994:

irisEichenb.-beige-br.-01.jpgIn 2000 she took over as head of the Rietveld Academy Jewelry Dept. after Ruudt Peters, and is now currently head of dept. at Cranbrook/Michigan.
She had already trained to become a nurse when she arrived in Amsterdam to study jewelry.Her work in the past has been a lot about the body and its various systems and processes - like in her “Hearts”. There was a whole pile of them in her graduation show, having all been knit by different women and sometimes using their own red wool. That gave the hearts a variation of interesting personalities in texture and colorations of red.

In recent years her themes have moved towards another area - that of kinship relations.
Her series “Heimat” - an untranslatable German word for place of origin, place of birth, home - a kind of symbolic realm that also bears a certain amount of longing. It’s looking back to her childhood memories of growing up in a German landscape. The typical building style with timbers, or the layout of the landscape, people in that past - all influence the materialization of the series.

Regarding the myriads of materials that Iris uses - it’s actually easier to ask what she hasn’t used, and the answer to that will probably be the shorter one. Amongst other techniques she sews and stitches through just about anything - rubber, plastics, textile, leather, wood, bone.

Jantje Fleischhut - German-born / graduated 2002:

Her fascination for plastic originally began with some intriguingly interesting thrown-away pieces of plastic trash and continued to evolve into her wonderfully colored and partly translucent sturdy light elements that are self-constructed of fiberglass and epoxy resin as we see here in this brooch from her series “Neighborhood”.

Her pieces from the series “We Are All Space Travellers” seem to suggest to us that they are technical articles for daily use. They are like prosthesis or navigational aides for encounters and recognizing.

Interesting is that the attachment pins in Jantje’s brooches are hidden away in little silver stopper tops, so that when the piece is worn the little stopper can either be fastened from behind your clothing or through a fold of the fabric on the front.

Gésine Hackenberg - German-born graduated 2001:

gesineHack.-plate-neckl.jpgA little ice-cream stick covered in Japanese Urushi laquer is worn with a separate pin as brooch. Her theme is the use of things in daily life and about belongings - jewelry and commodities, such as household and kitchen utensils. For example her graduation series was about spoons. Ultimately, her work is about personal preciousness. A gingham necklace seems to celebrate the simple everyday actions in one’s own personal living realm.

Besides textile, she has especially been using the extremely tough Japanese Urushi lacquer. This technique of is incredibly time- consuming. With it she makes sturdy hollow elements that are very lightweight. The shapes of both the laquer and silver elements are borrowed from kitchen objects, plastic joghurt containers, and other packaging. The silver parts were made by paint layering the inside of the original plastic elements for more thickness and directly casting them.

Her work is her manner of rendering and preserving the picture of the homely but slowly vanishing household-table-and-meals culture.

Ineke Heerkens - Dutch graduated 2001:

“A naked body jumping into the water creates a space around itself, a Waterhole.
At the very same moment the water becomes the body’s jacket…”

This Waterhole idea serves as Ineke’s personal metaphor representing the negative space that would be created with movements occurring in water. It’s her basis and recurrent theme in working. She starts out by making drawings of movements as in a Waterhole. These are then transferred onto flexible materials such as silk-screened textile or leather - like “Lily” here, made from leather with a thick layer of silk-screen ink and formed into shape in a heat process.

Once the drawings have been transferred onto the material they subsequently serve as
cutting patterns. These are then moulded and formed into organic, 3D forms.

Stephanie Jendis - German-born graduated 1999:

Starting point for her are classical jewels and the notion of preciousness and personal value. She connects the contrasts of natural and artificially manufactured materials, and combines known jewellery forms with unusual materials into hybrids. She often uses her own manner of faceting materials such as wood or the so-called reconstructed materials into her own gem forms. Reconstructed materials are made from the cutting dust of usually semi-precious stones or, for example, coral and then together with a binding agent compacted into easily workable slabs or blocks.

StephanieJendis-1_2-01.jpgIt’s about establishing another kind of harmony than the known in supposedly known objects. By adding something to a beautiful old piece of wood or plastic it turns into a little treasure of increased personal value. For Stephanie a piece of jewelry must have presence and attract attention; the jewel being about the personality of the wearer, should be individual and often have humor.

Manon van Kouswijk - Dutch graduated 1995:

As inspiration she focuses on everyday objects and archetypical forms. Her scope of work and starting points include things like the silver spoon, the white table cloth, and stationery. Jewelry is but a part of her work, and in that area it is the archetypes like the pearl or bead necklace that she comments on or makes visible certain aspects around the wearing of jewels - as in her neckpiece here titled “Once”, suggesting a classical pearl necklace but having been knotted without the pearls. To me it also seems to suggest memories faded away completely and lost.

Iris Nieuwenburg - Dutch graduated 2002:

FrancisWillemsteijnbr.3-01.jpgAs a little girl she had always been fascinated by dressing-up. Here she is playing on the tradition of the folkloristic. The ladies on these brooches are wearing the typical traditional Zeeland headdress ; this is the original version of the Zeeland headjewel - it’s those weird square plates of gold sticking out on either side of these ladies’ foreheads that look like rear-view mirrors.

Memories exist out of time, are unique, valuable, + irreplacable. With her work she tries to make a combination between valuable memories and valuable jewelry, while preserving the admiration of the jewel as well as the memory. Her work is a play on traditional classic jewelry such as diamond encrusted brooches or awards and trophies.

Iris has perfected her own technique of lacquer work that gives the pieces an enamel-like appearance. To make her assemblages she creates combinations with old motifs from antique Victorian picture paper or postcards, together with old ornaments, medallions, doll house things, her Grandmother’s jewelry, children’s toys, old teaspoons, antique carved flowers, mother-of-pearl buttons. She cuts up the element and images, rearranges and reassembles them with traditional goldsmithing techniques.

Katja Prins - Dutch graduated 1997:

She works around the intimate relationship with the body as in a necklace with flexible hollow latex rubber elements from her graduation series; the little lumps on the chain are pearls covered by the latex slathered onto it, or as in a brooch from a couple of years later, using silk cocoons and latex.

Later she further extends and incorporates the relationship aspect with medical or technical devices. You could say she tells stories about the body as an instrument or machine, about instruments and machines as extensions of the body, and the manipulation of our bodies as something that can be changed and sculpted. She sees our body as being an extension of the mind that is always in relationship with its surroundings and the environment.

Not being too specific about her work she wants people to discover their own stories in the work and interpret them in their own way.

Constanze Schreiber - German-born graduated 2004:

Her work inspiration is based on human needs and longings, the idea of how we deal with our fears in attempting to create stability. In her anchor piece the anchor stands for the common symbol for hope - and as the fragile blue coral suggests - all attempts to invoke that feeling of stability outside of ourselves through rituals or other things, don’t really help.

She made a whole series of brooches and neckpieces of recycled fur in varying outline forms of classical jewels that she has generously filled with lead, so that their weight makes us aware of the animal it once was.

Her interest in the rich history of antique jewelry guides her in her focus on the symbolism inherent in antique jewelry around essential themes as love, life, and death.

Francis Willemstijn - Dutch graduated 2004:

Francis shows her connection with Dutch history and her love of that heritage. Her work is like little depictions of that period, a period whose traces may soon have disappeared completely. She resurrects those glorious times in which this tiny country was a naval power, engaged in conquest and incredible sea battles. It’s about Holland’s shipping history in the 17th century - the Dutch “Golden Century” , about traditional costumes and jewelry, as well as the old customs.

Francis imbibes poorer materials with value through the time and energy consuming work of hand-crafting, which is her reaction to the hasty consumer oriented society in which traditions are rapidly fading away.

The name of the Brooch “Madder” is also the name for the dye that comes from the meekrap plant that was grown in Zeeland for a long time. Its raw dye extract had the typical red-brown color as in this brooch, but in combination with other ingredients it produced the typical bright red known from Dutch textiles. In the brooch Francis used a. o. enamel and little raw …

Museums That Collect Art Jewelry

Originally researched and compiled by AJF member Sharon Campbell, the institutions listed below all collect jewelry and show exhibitions of jewelry. Some have documented shows with a catalog and some have provided funding for a show to travel. Each has their own mission statement, artistic vision, jewelry statement, collection policy and goals. Some of this is shared below.

Anchorage Museum of History and Art
121 W. Seventh Avenue
Anchorage, AK 99501
www.anchoragemuseum.org

Arkansas Center for the Arts:
9th & Commerce / MacArthur Park
Little Rock, Arkansas 72203-2137
501.372.4000
www.arkarts.com

The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu
www.tcmhi.org

Cooper-Hewitt
Smithsonian Design Museum
Fifth Avenue at 91st
New York, NY
212.849.8155
www.ndm.si.edu

The Mint Museum
220 N. Tyson St.
Charlotte, NC 28202
704.337.2000
www.mintmuseum.org

The Mint Museum of Craft + Design is dedicated to building a 21st century jewelry collection, an artistic culmination of excellence, innovation, originality, and distinction in jewelry design. This collection will be international in scope. The Mint seeks not to duplicate existing museum collections but rather to assemble a collection that will chronicle innovative conceptual and technical developments. The museum aspires to combine important achievements by senior artists with those of mid-career practitioners working in all sectors of the medium. The Mint plans to be aggressive in acquiring multiple pieces by individual artists to illustrate creative growth across specific artistic careers. The museum intends to seek the widest audience possible for this collection through exhibition, permanent display, electronic and printed media.

Museum of Art and Design
40 W 53rd Avenue
New York, NY 10019
212.956.3535
www.americancraftmuseum.org

The Museum of Art and Design has long been committed to the display and interpretation of contemporary jewelry. When they acquired the Zero Carat Collection, it affirmed the Museum’s commitment to collect contemporary jewelry and chronicle the history of this vital art form as it unfolds. The museum is determined to be a center for the study of twentieth- and twenty-first-century jewelry.

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston:
www.mfa.org

Museum of Fine Arts, Houston:
1001 Bissonnet Street
Houston, Texas
713.639.7300
www.mfah.org

Museum of Fine Arts, Philadelphia
www.philamuseum.org

Jewelry from the permanent collection is included on an ongoing rotation in the Craft Corridor of the Museum. The entire collection is listed in the publication: Crafting a Legacy: Contemporary American Crafts in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Pieces by Albert Paley, Jan Yaeger, Bruce Metcalf and Gijs Bakker have been exhibited.

Oakland Museum of California:
1000 Oak Street
Oakland, California 94607
510.238.2200
www.museumca.org

The museum is continually seeking new pieces. They have received donations from private collectors in recent years and have purchased items. They have a strong representation of contemporary jewelry, assembled primarily by Kenneth Trapp for his popular 1995 exhibition, Permanent Collection: Gems: Collecting California’s Jewelry. They are continually working to fill the gaps in their collection. New talent continues to emerge that they want represented. They seek more pieces by the mature artists, whose work are already part of our collection; works that will mark different phases of their careers. Additionally, there are artists like Ken Cory, who worked in California at a critical time in the development of contemporary jewelry and in his own development, whom they want represented.

Palo Alto Cultural Center – Palo Alto, CA
www.city.palo-alto.ca.us/artcenter/
Curator Signe Mayfield has placed jewelry in juxtaposition with mainstream media, as a way to inform the viewer that concepts and formal beauty in jewelry may have equal value.

Racine Museum of Art
441 Main Street
Racine, WI 53401-0187
262.638.8300
www.ramart.org
Jewelry is displayed in the lobby cases of the museum. The Racine Art Museum houses one of the most significant collections of contemporary crafts in North America. It has one of the largest collections of artist-made jewelry of any museum. They will continue collecting artists in depth and accept gifts from collectors and artists. They are working on group and individual artist shows of jewelry.

Renwick Gallery
Smithsonian American Art Museum
1661 Pennsylvania Avenue at 17th Street N.W.
Washington, D.C.
202.633.2850
www.americanart.si.edu/renwick/index.cfm

Tacoma Art Museum
1701 Pacific Avenue
Tacoma, WA 98402
253.272.4258
www.TacomaArtMuseum.org

The Tacoma Art Museum connects people through art by serving the diverse communities of the Northwest through its collection, exhibitions, and learning programs, emphasizing art and artists of the Northwest. Studio Art Jewelry: This collection emphasizes the contemporary period and includes a major repository of works by Ken Cory. While the collection concentrates on Northwest jewelry artists, important representative works by national artists deemed important to establishing the milieu in which regional artists work will be encouraged.

Toledo Museum of Art:
www.toledomuseum.org/

Sharon Campbell was a founding member of the Art Jewelry Forum. She presently sits on the Jewelry Acquisition Committee and the Collection Committee at the Tacoma Art Museum, and is a trustee on the board of Pratt Fine Arts Center. She lives in Seattle, WA.

University Exhibitions

Museums on University Campuses (or Univ. affiliation)
Researched and Compiled by Sharon Campbell. The majority of the jewelry exhibitions that follow were initiated by educators / metalsmiths inside of the academic world. These shows are created to raise the awareness. I have heard it from many instructors: most students come to school knowing about famous artists in other media but they are hard pressed to name 3 famous metalsmiths. Their idea of jewelry is what they know from the traditional commercial industry. That is why the educators are putting in all this effort to curate exhibitions, looking for funds to document the shows and seeking venues where their shows can travel. The prevalent grievance, as spoken by Sondra Sherman, “The reason the institutional support outside of the academic world would be important is they reach a larger audience; they have authority and confer ‘art’ credibility. This helps generate more support and encourages more talented artists to work in this media/format.”

UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS - September, 2006

“East Coast meets West Coast”

Massachusetts College of Art in conjunction with Mobilia Gallery is hosting a Symposium on September 15 & 16, 2006 in Boston.

Workshops and Lectures given by the following artists:Marilyn da Silva: “Non-traditional Color on Metal”; Jack da Silva: “Metal in Motion: an Exploration of Anticlastic Forming”; Arline Fisch: “Textile Techniques in; Sarah Perkins: “Down and Dirty Enameling”; and Mariko Kusumoto: (lecture only)

There will be a book sale and signing during the event. A reception at Mobilia Gallery for the artists will follow the lectures on Saturday evening, September 16th.

On Sunday, September 17th, the Daphne Farago Lecture on Craft Jewelrypresents: “The Mozart Jewels of Kevin Coates” at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

For more information, visit: http://alumni.massart.edu/metalssymposium

The Atrium Gallery - Ball State University
http://www.bsu.edu/cfa/art/gallery/Atrium/

Ross Art Museum - Ohio Wesleyan University
http://admission.owu.edu/ross.html

January 2005
Lisa Gralnick – “The Gold Standard” works to conduct an inquiry into the value systems through which contemporary society negotiates progress, accumulates, knowledge, and promotes physical comfort through consumerism.

Bakalar Gallery Massachusetts College of Art Boston http://babel.massart.edu/metals/contact/

June 13 – September 30, 2004
“ContacT”: an international jewelry exhibition is a workshop series and an international conference of artists who are actively exploring new and relevant ways to make jewelry speak, using this wordless medium as a way to contact with others. Jewelry is an intimate personal means of communicating concepts, ideals, status, and beliefs to ourselves as well as to those around us. This powerful language, worn on our bodies, crosses cultural and social boundaries throughout the world.

Bannister Gallery Rhode Island College –Providence, RI
http://www.ric.edu/Bannister/

October 30 – November 26, 2003
Evocative Objects : Studio Metalsmithing and Jewelry
Curated by Sondra Sherman
Documented w/ catalogue.
The works in the exhibition use the familiarity and traditional roles of jewelry and domestic objects to access ideas, emotions, and perceptual experiences encouraged by their association to the individual or the home.

March 31 - April 22, 2005
“Alternatives: Materials / Means”
Documented w/ color poster.
Curated by Sondra Sherman
Works selected are one-of-a kind / limited edition, jewelry objects created predominately by non-traditional means and / or materials. The key word is predominant — not in the sense of how found objects have been used in place of gemstones, but as more essential in determining the idea and form of the work.

Belk Gallery – Western Carolina University Cullowhee, NC
http://www.wcuart@wcu.edu/

March 13 – April 14, 2000
“Daniel Jocz: uncommon sense”
Curated by Suzanne Ramljak
Incorporating aspects of architecture, sculpture, painting, and the decorative arts, his small-scale objects also engage various stylistic movements, including Surrealism, Expressionism, Minimalism and Pop.
Documented with a catalogue and traveled to: The Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, OH; Rosenwald Wolf Gallery – University of the Arts, Philadelphia, PA; Gallery of Art & Design – North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC.

Dorothy Uber Bryan Gallery - Bowling Green State University - Bowling Green Ohio

August 27 – September 27, 2002
“Inventing Contemporary Ornament” Curated by Tom Muir
This exhibition included a range of utilitarian and non-utilitarian jewelry, vessels, and sculpture created by of 14 artists. Each artist offers a unique viewpoint that informs her/his work, providing us with a rich and stimulating perspective that interprets and interacts with contemporary, historical, and social issues.

Cranbrook – Bloomfield Hills, MI
http://www.cranbrook.edu/art/museum/

November 15, 1996 – January 5, 1997
“Signals: Late Twentieth-Century American Jewelry” Curated by Gary Griffin Featured in American Craft April/May 1997
This exhibition describes the 15 featured artists as being “consciously aware of the issues related to the wearing of Jewelry” and employing “the public and social nature of jewelry in the distribution of the messages.” Gary Griffin points out that the human body is not only the site of display but also the subject. In virtually all these works, the body is either mapped, described, located, used metaphorically or in some way rendered inseparable from what the works are about. This show traveled to the Montreal Museum of Decorative Arts, Quebec, Canada and the Parsons School of Design, NY, NY. “Messengers of Modernism” was the concurrent exhibition.

Elvehjem Museum of Art – University of Wisconsin Madison, WI http://www.lvm.wisc.edu/

Mid-2006
“Fred Fenster, Eleanor Moty, and the University of Wisconsin Art Metals Program”
Organized for the Elvehjem Museum of Art by guest curator Jody Clowes, the exhibition will feature approximately 100 works by twenty-eight artists, and will be accompanied by a fully illustrated scholarly catalogue.

The June Fitzpatrick Gallery at MECA - Maine College of Art Portland, ME Presents its first contemporary jewelry exhibition
http://www.junefitzpatrickgallery.com/

November 18th, 2004
“Sensuous Matter”
Curated by Tina Rath and Sharon Portelance
This exhibition seeks to explore the ways in which artists understand and engage the world through Sensuous Matter.

Gallery of Art & Design North Carolina State University -– Raleigh, NC
www.ncsu.edu/gad

August 19 - Sept. 26, 2004
“Rings” Curated by Robert Ebendorf
125 contemporary rings juried by Robert Ebendorf, by makers from across the country will be displayed. Ebendorf was the juror for the newly published Lark book, 1000 Rings. The rings included in this exhibition are from this book.

The Adair Margo Gallery University of Texas at El Paso
http://www.adairmargo.com/

January 17th – March, 2005
”Hanging in Balance: Forty-two Contemporary Necklaces” is a survey of innovative jewelry by recognized artists from England, Germany, Mexico and the U.S. All of the pieces are one-of-a-kind art works that may affect the wearer’s posture and relationship with internal and external worlds. This exhibition is the second in a continuing series of format-based contemporary jewelry exhibitions hosted by UTEP (“The Ring” was on view in September/October 2002.)

The RISD Museum - Rhode Island School of Design
http://www.risd.edu/
Continues to collect jewelry for the Museum collection, both historic and contemporary and recently placed 40 pieces from their jewelry collection on permanent view in two drawers in the Silver Gallery in Pendleton House.

February 2 – April 15, 2001
“A View by Two”
Curated by Louis Mueller and Barbara Seidenath
When asked what he was hoping to accomplish with this exhibition, Louis Mueller said: I think it is important to help people understand that even though jewelry is for decoration and adornment, there is a lot to it. If you look at these little objects, a lot of them are so beautifully rendered and wonderful proportioned – and the surface, color, details are all so carefully resolved. I hope this exhibition provides an opportunity for people to appreciate what goes into their struggles and their creative efforts.

The Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art SUNY-New Paltz, NY
www.newpaltz.edu/museum/
(Part of its mission is to build and sustain an art jewelry collection.)

January – March, 2002
“Markers in Contemporary Metal”
Curated by Myra Mimlitsch Gray & Jamie Bennett
Reviewed in Metalsmith
The artists in “Markers” represent a closely-knit group of practitioners whose shared academic experience, while genealogically succinct, reveals an impressive breadth of individual creative expression. For some, the body is the locus for physical, visual and conceptual engagement, whether through jewelry or objects. Others negotiate historical and contemporary concepts related to the nature of utilitarian objects. The exhibition enables the viewer to consider how objects are marked by their associations, by the intent of the artist, and by their existence in a particular time and context. The show highlighted the permanent collection and included over 120 works by fifty-four artists represented therein.

Sharon Campbell was a founding member of the Art Jewelry Forum. She presently sits on the Jewelry Acquisition Committee and the Collection Committee at the Tacoma Art Museum, and is a trustee on the board of Pratt Fine Arts Center. She lives in Seattle, WA.

FEATURED UNIVERSITY EXHIBITION

Stanlee and Gerald Rubin Gallery
University of Texas at El Paso
January 20-March 10, 2005

Hanging in Balance: Forty-Two Contemporary Necklaces

Hanging in Balance: Forty-Two Contemporary Necklaces is a survey of innovative jewelry by recognized artists from England, Germany, Mexico and the U.S. All of the pieces are one-of-a-kind, newly created and never before exhibited art works that may affect the wears’ posture and relationship with internal and external worlds. Each draws upon historical examples of body adornment as a signifier of social status and personal beliefs. Though these historical examples range widely in materials, aesthetics and meaning, they share two important traits: wearability and the power to convey meaning. Each of the fourteen invited artists will create three works for the exhbition. The artists include:

Nora FokNora Fok Maru Almeida, Mexico; Nora Fok, U.K.; Jan Baum, U.S.; Maria Hanson, U.K.; Iris Boedemer, Germany; Dorothy Hogg, U.K.; Cynthia Cousens, U.K.; Svenja John, Germany; Bettina Dittlmann, Germany; Maria Phillips, U.S.; Helen Dorion, U.S.; Anika Ariella Smulovitz, U.S.; Sandra Enterline, U.S.; Andrea Wippermann, Germany.

For Hanging in Balance, Rachelle Thiewes, co-curator of the exhibition and professor of art at UTEP, selected artists who create jewelry that performs these traits and also draws inspiration from additional sources, including nature, industry, theater, architecture and the history of art. For example, Cynthia Cousens looks to the natural surroundings of her home in Brighton, England, stringing branch-like forms between willowy links of silver. Nora Fok knits monofilament into collars that reference those worn by jesters or seventeenth-century Dutchmen. Jan Baum enamels floral forms reminiscent of Art Nouveau decorative arts and wallpaper patterns.

The exhibition catalogue will include two essays that explore these complex references. Invited essayist Ursula Ilse-Neuman, curator at the Museum of Arts and Design, New York City, will examine how the necklaces expand the history of art and of jewelry. Co-curator Kate Bonansinga will discuss the formal qualities of each piece and how those qualities interact with and transform the wearer. The exhibition will travel to the Southwest School of Art and Craft, San Antonio, TX, (June-August 2005) and Mobilia Gallery, Cambridge, MA (November 1-December 15, 2005). The visiting artists component of the exhibition at the Rubin will be funded in part by Anne and Sam Davis.