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here we go…..catch-up time!

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whew! it has been busy my way!  but…..i’m back and ready to share a lot of what’s been going on!  i feel like the last two months have been nothing but a blink.  i have been designing new work, making jewelry installations, enameling, spray painting, casting, book making, photoshoping, and a lot of other “ings” i’m sure!   i am thrilled to have finished my graduating senior exhibition “[Construct]ion: A Senior Exhibition” with two of my fellow classmates, Nick Heyl and Crystal Lin.    there will be lots more posts and pics from that! also, there have been many fascinating lectures, workshops and fun-times all around.  stay tuned to see what’s coming up next!

Progress and Progress This Week at The Bench

ImageWhew!  I have been busy this week working on a new body of work for Light Art & Design out of Chapel Hill, NC.  These pieces are a fun and whimsical spin on my cast cement pieces incorporating steel.  Really excited to see how I can control the rust and the staining.  I also have been working on new finishes for the upcoming new skateboard neckpieces and earrings for the ever-progressing Street King Bling Series.  The goal is to have three new neck-pieces by the end of March.  We’ll see how the month progresses!  See you soon!

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Fluxplay Claw Setting – So Good!

Fluxplay Claw Setting – So Good!

Check out this link!!!  This is such an awesome refresher!  Thanks Maria Whetman!

 

 

 

SPLURGE 2012 @ Equinox Gallery in San Antonio, TX

  I am very excited and honored to be exhibiting in the upcoming exhibition SPLURGE @ Equinox Gallery in San Antonio, Texas!  The show will feature 14 contemporary jewelry artists whose work will all be available for $100 and under.  A big thank-you goes out to my good friend and curator, Laura Wood for all her hard work!  If your in the area, you should most definitely check the show out.  Below are some of the pieces I created for the show along with some other works of the artists.  Thanks for stopping by and have a great weekend!

Set Silhouettes by Tara Locklear

Set Silhouettes by Tara Locklear

Crystal Earrings by Sarah West

Crystal Earrings by Sarah West

The Hunted Owl Talon Pendant by Lisette Fee

The Hunted Owl Talon Pendant by Lisette Fee

Basket Earrings by Jenn Wells

Basket Earrings by Jenn Wells

Where to Start…..Process and Progress!

Well!  Just now getting settled in as January is coming to a close and February begins.  Usually par for course! Lol!  I feel as though so much has happened between process on my bench overflowing into new ideas and lots of new designs for some of the pieces I have been working with.  I had a wonderful experience during the 2011 holiday season by being a part of some great exhibitions.  So honored to be included!!! The work I made helped me to expand my ideas and techniques by working small in production format.

Drop Deck Studs for The Heidi Lowe Multiple Show 2011

Drop Deck Studs for The Heidi Lowe Multiple Show 2011

Drop Deck Stud Dangle for the Heidi Lowe Mulitple Show 2011

Drop Deck Stud Dangle for The Heidi Lowe Multiple Show 2011

The upcoming few months will be more investigation and development on a larger scale!! So excited to work large again! I want to create some new neck pieces, bracelets and complete series for my senior show.  I know I have large dreams of grandeur to get it all done but if I just keep my nose to my bench pin I can get it done!

Skateboard Bling 2011 at Light Art and Design Holliday Exhibition 2011

Skateboard Bling 2011 at Light Art and Design Holiday Exhibition 2011

Drop Deck Studded Bangle for the Light Art and Design Holiday Exhibition 2011

Drop Deck Studded Bangle for the Light Art and Design Holiday Exhibition 2011

Well so long for now until next time!!! I’ll be back with more shots from the bench and the ECU Metals Symposium!!!!

Sharing today about Sam Cramer and Art Smith

Found this article today from the Jewelry Loupe.  Wanted to repost!  Enjoy!

Smith & Sam Kramer: heyday of Modernist jewelry

January 20, 2011

By

Lovers Brooch by Sam Kramer of sterling, turquoise and garnet (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)

While musicians and poets were rebelling against the status quo in Greenwich Village in the mid-20th century, metalsmiths like Art Smith and Sam Kramer were setting up studios there and reinventing modern jewelry.

Many people picture Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac or Bob Dylan when they think of Greenwich Village in its artistic heyday. Mad Men fans got a peek at that bohemian scene, circa 1960s, through Midge, Donald Draper’s beatnik lover.

Jewelry artist Sam Kramer (1913-1964) fit right in. Setting up shop in Greenwich Village in 1939, Kramer epitomized the eccentric artist, sometimes opening his store in the morning still wearing his pajamas.

Kramer’s shop was itself a study in Surrealism, from a hand-shaped front door handle customers had to “shake” to enter, to oversized jewelry with hallucinogenic figures and Dali-esque body parts. Sam Kramer described himself as a rock hound and was known to incorporate fossils, meteorites, coral, rhinoceros tusks, even glass taxidermy eyes in his jewelry. He once attempted to make a bracelet from his wife’s recently-removed gallstones.

Audrey Friedman, owner of the Primavera Gallery, remembers exploring these shops in the 1950s, when flower and animal motifs were all the rage in fine jewelry. “I used to hang around down in the Village and I remember a lot of jewelers making things with glass eyeballs, things that were kind of surreal,” Friedman says. “You figure, if the style was birds and flowers, than to do something with eyeballs and lips would have been really different, very countercultural.”

Cuff bracelet of copper and brass by Art Smith, c. 1948 (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)

“A lot of studio jewelers had their studios in the Village then,” she recalls. “One place on MacDougal street – I forget who the guy was – had a doorknob with a big glass eyeball. I remember buying a piece of jewelry there and after I got it home, I decided it was godawful ugly and tried to rework it, unsuccessfully.”

It was easy to get caught up in the creative spirit though. “There was the idea then of doing something that was a little bit outrageous,” Friedman says. Those early forays into the Village left her with a taste for wearable surrealism and led to her own collection of Salvador Dali jewels, including the famous Ruby Lips brooch, which has been exhibited in museums around the world.

Not far from Kramer’s shop was the studio of Art Smith (1917-1982), another important jewelry artist of the forties. Smith’s jewelry also ran large but where Kramer’s was figural and humorous, Smith’s was abstract and dramatic. Daphne Farago was obviously enamored with Smith’s jewelry. There are 15 works by him in the 650-piece collection she donated to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in 2005.

Necklace of sterling and semi-precious stones by Art Smith, c. 1958 (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)

An African American who grew up in New York City, Smith took his inspiration from African tribal art and costume. He worked as a costume designer for several black dance companies in New York, which allowed him to experiment with his favorite theme: movement. “His work was very large and sculptural but designed to sit well and move with the body,” says Kelly L’Ecuyer, curator of decorative arts and sculpture at Boston MFA, who helped organize an exhibit of Farago’s collection in 2007. “His primary concern was the relationship with the body.”

“Work by Art Smith and Sam Kramer have, at times, a raw appearance, but in terms of the art world, they were at the cutting edge—the equivalent of a painter or sculptor,” says Yvonne Markowitz, the museum’s curator of jewelry. Part of the raw quality of this early work came from lack of available jewelry training in the U.S. at the time. Kramer took a jewelry-making course in southern California taught by a ceramicist and Smith apprenticed with a jeweler. Other jewelry artists of their day learned casting from dentists and forging by hanging out at dockyards.

While Smith’s jewelry was more graceful in form, Kramer did a lot to promote the use of found objects in jewelry. When Farago’s collection was exhibited in 2007, you could see the evolution from Sam Kramer’s 1950 cuff bracelet set with taxidermy eyeball to necklaces made a half century later from wooden rulers (by Kiff Slemmons) and crack viles (by Jan Yeager).

Jewelry by contemporary jewelry artist Bruce Metcalf was also shown, looking every bit as trippy and Surrealistic as the early work of Sam Kramer. Kramer would have appreciated the zany direction studio jewelry took after his death in 1964.

For more on this era, I recommend these books: Messengers of Modernism: American Studio Jewelry 1940-1960 or Form & Function: American Modernist Jewelry, 1940-1970

Busy Busy Busy

Whew!!! The last several months has blown by and I haven’t posted to my blog about all the wonderful and exciting things stewing in my world! I will be posting lots of new work, shows, amazing artists I’ve gotten to know and much, much more!  For now, I will leave you with some iconic contemporary jewelry pieces, designs, and paintings from makers I always look upon for inspiration! See you soon!

Art Smith - Ellington NecklaceArt Smith - Ellington Necklace

Art Smith – Abstract Collar circa 1950′s (brass $15!!!)
Margaret de Patta - Pendant, 1960's
Margaret de Patta – Pendant, 1960′s

Elsa Freund - Space Pendant with Circlet / early 1960's

 

Steel, Enamel, Decals – The Lighter Side with EGW

I am so pumped to tell you about my weekend!!! I had such an amazing time out in San Diego with the Enamel Guild West.  If it weren’t for Vivian Stillwell, I wouldn’t have had this wonderful opportunity to teach this great group.  Thank-you so much, Vivian!  We shared and learned a ton from one another.  The workshop was about how to make you own full color decals and fire them on enamel on steel!  They made some amazing pieces!  Here’s  sneak peak at the group  and some the pieces made.  There will be more blogging to come!

Laura Wood

Penland Tarp Brooch - Laura Wood

Penland Tarp Brooch - Laura Wood

Paper. Encaustics. Metal. Powder Coating. Teacher. Jewelry.  Amazing. These are just a few words that describe a dear friend and fellow metalsmith – Laura Wood.  She is one of those people that never loses focus, never raises her voice and always answers the phone for one of my millions of questions.  I am so excited about her new work too!  I wanted to include some of my favorites as well as her newest piece.  She has recently graduated from East Carolina University with her Masters in Metal Design in Greenville, North Carolina.  She is currently the artist in residence for the metals and paper areas at the Southwest School of Art in San Antonio, Texas. I’m jealous that Texas has her all to itself but I can share I guess! Watch out Texas – Laura’s gonna turn you guys upside down!!!

Becky Parker – Kelly R. Hawkins

Well, my photographer, lil-sister-i-never-had, family and great friend Becky Parker is on the move – to Austin, Texas!  She has taken off with her traveling cohort Kelly Hawkins to start their new photography studio.  I have to say I will miss her not being on the east coast but am super excited she’s movin’ on up!  If you haven’t checked out either one of the ladies blogs / websites yet, do so.  Your def missing out.  The fresh approach these ladies take to capturing the moment thru a single lens is pretty amazing.

kelly. becky parker

nikki. becky parker

stina. becky parker

alessandro. kelly r hawkins

ashley. kelly r hawkins

abandoned zoo la. kelly r hawkins

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