Metal Winners
The value is in the art at the Ornamental Metal Museums jewelry
exhibition.
by Cory Dugan
ewelry can be, as seen in the Jewels of the Romanovs exhibition,
an imperious and ostentatious artifice. On the other hand as
evidenced by Revelations, an exhibit of contemporary work by
members of the Society of North American Goldsmiths at the National
Ornamental Metal Museum it can also be an urbane and egalitarian
art form.
Unlike the empty opulence in Overton Park, Revelations is quiet
and thoughtful, reflective in the intellectual rather than the
ocular sense. While the works are by members of a association
of goldsmiths, actual gold is as rare and sparingly used in this
work as it is in real life. Silver is the most commonly utilized
metal, followed by copper, steel, and brass. Gemstones are even
rarer than gold; slate and marble, enamel and glass serve the
purpose when metal alone is insufficient.
Fine-art jewelry over the past few decades has more and more followed
the
 |
Kiff Slemons, Penannular, (silver, brass, pencils, erasers). |
directions of sculpture and architecture than those of design
and fashion. In some cases, this results in work that stretches
the definition of jewelry beyond its already flexible boundaries
Michelle Milner Scotts Trova-esque Try Cycle and Marjorie Schicks
clunky papier-mache constructions are simply bad as sculpture
and ludicrous as jewelry. In most cases, however, the work benefits
from the influences by exploring not only those fluctuant boundaries
but even the very concept of jewelry.
Architecture and industrial design may at first seem strange bedfellows
to jewelry, but all are in fact related to and, to some extent,
dictated by the human form and the human scale. The artists in
Revelations who explore this relationship do so with wit and
with varying degrees of reverence. Lynda Laroches Site Plan,
an elegant pin of marble and silver, is a fairly faithful abstraction
of an architectural drawing in shallow three-dimension. Christine
Leitners Melting Pot, Joe Muenchs Target Brooch, and Sandra
Zilkers Flower/Leaf/Wall also successfully blend either architectural
design or actual, albeit tiny, architectural space into their
work.
Industrial and commercial design show up in the pattern of tire-treads
in Boris Ballys surprisingly classical Tread Wear Brooches; in
Robin Crafts oddly baroque pieces based on eyewear designs; and
in Sandra Enterlines exquisite capsule pendants, expertly fabricated
of steel and silver to contain, exhibit, and protect fragile birds
eggs. These latter pieces are potently lyric and ironic, juxtaposing
nature with slick space-age industrial design.
Equally ironic, especially considering the oppugnant exhibit halfway
across town, is Kiwon Wangs Re-Cycled. Employing simple rings
fashioned from silver and gold, Wang eschews the traditional embellishments
of gemstones and opts instead for tiny compacted stacks of scrap
newspaper. The result is impractical as actual jewelry (one ring,
for example, would extend three or four inches from the wearers
finger); but, as such, it calls into question the purpose and
relevance of valuable jewelry itself in todays disposable society.
More direct in his questioning is Kiff Slemmons, whose Penannular
uses historical means to contemporary ends. The penannular form
is Celtic in origin, a simple pin used to close a medieval cloak;
eventually, it became more decorative and less functional, more
brooch than clasp, and a symbol of status. This, of course, is
the history of most jewelry forms, and Slemmons uses the penannular
as a parable. His own is elaborate and symmetrical, traditionally
Celtic in design. Except the pin has been replaced by a common
#2 yellow pencil, the jewels by worn pink pencil erasers. From
utilitarian to decorative to status symbol to completely useless;
the cycle echoes the history of Western art.
The most inquisitive piece in the Reflections exhibit is one
that truly questions the role of jewelry in its relationship to
the human body. One accepts that jewelry by its nature and its
design is scaled to the body rings, bracelets, necklaces, earrings,
all are made to fit around or through certain parts of the human
anatomy. With Adornments: Cellulitis of the Neck, Julia Barello
takes jewelrys relationship to the body one step further; not
only is her gold-plated silver neckpiece designed to fit the body,
it also exhibits in rendered relief what is beneath the skin at
the exact point where the jewelry hides it veins, nerves, muscles,
fat, etc.
Is the consumer public ready for conceptual jewelry? Its doubtful.
But faced, at Christmas time, with Tiffanys and the Brooks, they
should at least consider it a welcome and (hopefully) thought-provoking
respite from the overbearing materialism of the holiday season.
After all, isnt everyone looking for a bargain? And Revelations,
at a fifth the admission price of Romanovs, is worth tenfold
as much in true value. n
Revelations: New Jewelry by Members of the Society of North American
Goldsmiths
National Ornamental Metal Museum
374 Metal Museum Drive, 774-6380
$3 admission; through February 1st
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