The
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As
art jewelry comes into its own in America, galleries are clasping
onto the trend and finding success with the art/jewelry mix.
Throughout the world, body ornamentation is an ancient and
time-honored art form. Yet in the United States, jewelry as art has
only recently come into its own.
Such
art is not the series of gold tennis bracelets lined up in a glass
case at the mall. Nor is it the design of a single artist whose
staff puts it into mass production. These are handcrafted, one-of-a-kind
works conceived and executed by the artist with all the technical
elements and aesthetics that carry it across the line into the realm
of fine art.
"The distinction between
mass-produced jewelry and art jewelry is not just in the quantity
but the design," said jewelry artist Gretchen Kubacky of Los
Angeles. "I've seen some stunningly high-quality designs in
a department store that wouldn't be considered fine art, and I've
seen $5,000 diamond earrings that have no design quality to them.
Art is in the eye of the beholder."
Kubacky identifies her
own work as "ethnicized contemporary" jewelry drawn from
historical images, as well as craft and folk art. She uses sterling
silver, high-quality stones and pearls, but she likes to mix them
up, putting hand-made stones from India with cultured pearls--the
fine and the not-so-fine--to create a more hand-made appearance...You
can read more.