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02/10/2015

EXPO ‘Amber Chamber’ – Gallery Velvet da Vinci, San Francisco (USA) – 1-31 Oct. 2015

Amber Chamber
New jewelry from an ancient material…
Artists’ Reception: Friday, October 2, 6-8pm

Amber chamber - velvet da Vinci(Helfried Kodre, Brooch, 2015, Amber, sterling silver)

Featured Artists:   Elisabeth Defner — Christiane Förster Heidemarie HerbHerman Hermsen Beate Klockmann Helfried Kodré Philip Sajet Peter Skubic Gisbert Stach Petra Zimmermann

This exhibition shows a number of different approaches to amber, running the gamut from artists working with amber for the first time, to those who have been working with it for an extended period.  The contrasts in these works should help to update the traditional and still rather one-sided view of amber jewelry, showing new possibilities about this interesting material.  Amber, fossilized tree resin, has been appreciated for its color and inherent beauty since Neolithic times.
Curated by Heidemarie Herb.

Herman Hermsen, AllaDali (Brooch), 2015, shark yaw, amber, gold 15 x 8 cmHerman Hermsen, AllaDali (Brooch), 2015, shark yaw, amber, gold 15 x 8 cm
Gisbert Stach, Golden Toast 3 Brooch, 2013, Baltic amber, transparent silicon, stainless steel.  Photo: Gisbert StachGisbert Stach, Golden Toast 3 Brooch, 2013, Baltic amber, transparent silicon, stainless steel.  Photo: Gisbert Stach

 Peter Skubic, Untitled Brooch, 2015, Amber, coral, stainless steel, 9 x 8.5 x 2.7 cm. Photo: Petra ZimmermannPeter Skubic, Untitled Brooch, 2015, Amber, coral, stainless steel, 9 x 8.5 x 2.7 cm. Photo: Petra Zimmermann

 Petra Zimmermann, Untitled (Rings), 2014/2015, Amber, polymethylmethacrylate, gold Petra Zimmermann, Untitled (Rings), 2014/2015, Amber, polymethylmethacrylate, gold

Heidemarie Herb, Neckpieces: Time, 2014, Sterling silver, brass, iron, natural rope, baltic amber, 13 cm. Photo by: Silvana Tili: Heidemarie Herb, Neckpieces: Time, 2014, Sterling silver, brass, iron, natural rope, baltic amber, 13 cm. Photo by: Silvana Tili:  

Beate Klockmann, Earrings, Untitled, 2015, Gold, amber, Plastic, 40 x 40 x 20cmBeate Klockmann, Earrings, Untitled, 2015, Gold, amber, Plastic, 40 x 40 x 20cm

 

Velvet da Vinci
2015 Polk Street,
San Francisco, CA 94109
Phone: 415-441-0109
Email:  info@velvetdavincigallery.com
Hours: Tuesday through Saturday, 11am – 6pm, Sunday, 11am – 4pm

10/08/2015

EXPO ‘BEATE KLOCKMANN PHILIP SAJET Bijoux contemporains’ – Galerie Diane & Eric Lhoste, Biarritz (FR) – 5-29 Aout 2015

Galerie Lhoste – BEATE KLOCKMANN PHILIP SAJET BIJOUX CONTEMPORAINSdu 5 au 29 août 2015

Vernissage le 11 aout à partir de 18h
 Galerie Lhoste
*****
Exposition Bijoux Contemporains - Galerie Lhoste - BEATE KLOCKMANN  PHILIP SAJET  BIJOUX CONTEMPORAINS  du 5 au 29 août 2015  Vernissage le 11 août à partir de 18h  25 avenue Edouard VII BiarritzBEATE KLOCKMANN (left) neckpiece  – PHILIP SAJET (right) ring

 Philip Sajet  Philip Sajet  « Ethereal », 2013, quartz, pearls, gold Beate KlockmannBeate Klockmann Gold, Copper, Enamel

Philip SajetPhilip Sajet Campagna 4, 2014, rock crystal, jade, garnet

Philip Sajet  Philip Sajet

gal LHOSTE - Beate KlockmannBeate Klockmann

 

Galerie Diane Eric Lhoste
25 avenue Edouard VII
64200 Biarritz – FR
tel 06 07 83 38 91
diane.bianchi0@orange.fr

 

02/05/2015

EXPO ‘Amber Chamber’- The Ring Gallery, Legnica (Poland) – 28 Avril-7 Juin 2015

Amber Chamber

 The Ring Gallery, Legnica, Poland – curator : Heidemarie Herb
The opening of the travelling exhibition, which presents ten renown artists taking a fresh look on amber, coincides with the Legnica Jewellery Festival Silver.
This exhibition shows a number of different approaches to amber, running the gamut from artists working with amber for the first time, to those who have been working with it for an extended period. The contrasts in these works should help to update the traditional and still rather one-sided view of amber jewelry, showing new possibilities about this interesting material.
Amber Chamber Exhibition  /  28 Apr-7 Jun 2015 - The Ring Gallery, Legnica, Poland

Artist list :  Elisabeth Defner — Christiane FörsterHeidemarie HerbHerman HermsenBeate KlockmannHelfried KodréPhilip SajetPeter SkubicGisbert StachPetra Zimmermann

Helfried Kodré Brooch: Untitled, 2015 Amber, silver 6 x 9 cm Photo by: Helfried KodréHelfried Kodré Brooch: Untitled, 2015 Amber, silver 6 x 9 cm Photo by: Helfried Kodré
Gisbert Stach Brooch: Golden Toast, 2013 Baltic amber, transparent silicon, steel 11 x 10.5 x 1.8 cm Photo by: Gisbert StachGisbert Stach Brooch: Golden Toast, 2013 Baltic amber, transparent silicon, steel 11×10.5×1.8 cm Photo by: Gisbert Stach
Christiane Förster Brooch: Untitled, 2015 Amber, mother-of-pearl, silver 5.7 x 5 x 0.7 cm Photo by: Christiane FörsterChristiane Förster Brooch: Untitled, 2015 Amber, mother-of-pearl, silver 5.7 x 5 x 0.7 cm Photo by: Christiane Förster
Heidemarie Herb Ring: Untitled, 2014 Baltic Amber, silver Photo by: Heidemarie HerbHeidemarie Herb Ring: Untitled, 2014 Baltic Amber, silver Photo by: Heidemarie Herb
Philip Sajet Ring: Untitled, 2014 Amber, white gold 3.5 x 1.8 x 1.1 cm Photo by: Beate KlockmannPhilip Sajet Ring: Untitled, 2014 Amber, white gold 3.5 x 1.8 x 1.1 cm Photo by: Beate Klockmann
Peter Skubic Brooch: Untitled, 2015 Amber, coral, stainless steel 9 x 8.5 x 2.7 cm Photo by: Petra ZimmermannPeter Skubic Brooch: Untitled, 2015 Amber, coral, stainless steel 9 x 8.5 x 2.7 cm Photo by: Petra Zimmermann
Petra Zimmermann Rings: Untitled, 2014/2015 Amber, polymethylmethacrylate, gold Photo by: Petra ZimmermannPetra Zimmermann Rings: Untitled, 2014/2015 Amber, polymethylmethacrylate, gold Photo by: Petra Zimmermann
 
Venues
28 Apr 2015 – 07 Jun 2015 Legnica Jewellery Festival SILVER 2015, The Ring Gallery, Legnica, PL
10 Jul 2015 – 23 Aug 2015 Galerie Orfèo, Luxembourg, LU
01 Oct 2015 – 31 Oct 2015 Velvet da Vinci, San Francisco, USA
05 Mar 2016 – 01 Apr 2016 Alternatives Gallery, Rome, IT
01 Jul 2016 – 31 Jul 2016 (AV 17) Gallery, Vilnius, LT
06 Oct 2016 – 16 Nov 2016 Galerie V&V, Vienna, AT
 
 
The Ring Gallery
Rynek 12
Legnica
POLAND
mail : heidemarie.herb@gmail.com

 

25/03/2014

EXPO ‘Frühling’ – Galerie Rosemarie Jäger, Hochheim (DE) – 23 Mars- 13 Avril 2014

Beate Klockmann and Philip Sajet: Couples in Jewelry—Frühling

Galerie Rosemarie Jäger, Hochheim, Germany

Coming Sunday morning, welcome.
Beate Klockmann & Philip Sajet
Rosemarie Jäger had been noticing how many couples there are in the jewelry world, and suddenly one day, she realized that it was a great idea for a series of shows. This one, with Beate Klockmann and Philip Sajet, is the first, and appropriately it is called Frühling or “Spring” and is the beginning of the series. It is fascinating that there are so many couples working together or at least living together. It will be fun to interview some of them and understand better how that works. I am very curious.
 
Philip Sajet, Ring, 2013 A la recherche du joyau perdu 12, 2013, ring, rock crystal, gold, silver, enamel,Philip Sajet, A la recherche du joyau perdu 12, 2013, ring, rock crystal, gold, silver, enamel, 50 x 23 x 12 mm, photo: Beate Klockmann
 
Susan Cummins: Please tell the story of where you were born and raised and how you became interested in making jewelry
 Beate Klockmann: I was born in the GDR (German Democratic Republic) and raised up in a little town in Thuringia in Ilmenau. Johann Sebastian Bach lived in this area, and I like that because I feel connected to his music, but I have no musical talent at all. My father and my mother both worked in the porcelain industry, and I got my drawing talent from my grandmother. She was a workaholic, making cloth the whole day long with a lot of creative ambitions, but she did not have a lot of possibilities during the war. I decided to make jewelry spontaneously after seeing a slideshow that was shown to introduce different departments of the Burg Gibichenstein, Hochschule für Kunst and Design, Halle, Germany. I remember I was touched by a photo of a classically made little precious box with blue enamel and golden animal inlays. I hadn’t looked at jewelry before.
 
Philip Sajet: I was born in Amsterdam and raised by a French mother of Russian descent and a Polish-American (step) father. We travelled to Djakarta, Indonesia, where I saw a lot of Chinese antiques—so beautiful, so magnificent. I love tradition. I think that 96-percent of what I do is based on accumulated knowledge. Well actually, I am being very presumptuous here. I should have written 98.7 percent.
I was very fascinated by these small objects with colors and colored stones and enamels. Their (heavy) weight felt so powerful. I think I fell love with these objects several times—When I saw the jewels in the palace of the shah when I was 13 (1966), and then when I saw Egyptian jewelry. But the time that made me decide to also do it was when I saw the jewelry of Giampaolo Babetto and Francesco Pavan. That was in 1977 in Gallery Nouvelles Images. I remember the first question I asked my teacher Karel (Niehorster): “How do they get that intense yellow color?” “Well, by using gold” he answered. But it was so expensive—8 Dutch guilders a gram (2.5 US dollars)!Beate Klockmann, Brooch, 2013
 Beate Klockmann, Butterfly, 2013, brooch, 110 x 80 x 20 mm, photo: artist
How did you meet?
 Beate Klockmann: In 2001, I was a student in Halle Burg Gibichenstein and busy with my last pieces for my final exam. Philip was supposed to teach, but because of certain circumstances, his students had to finish another project and didn’t appear the first days of the workshop. So Philip focused on the only person available, and that was me. He was sitting next to me and was solving problems for me that I didn’t have days before. And I liked to solve these new problems with him
Philip Sajet: Now, here the accounts may differ. I was in Halle in 2001 in March. I was doing a workshop in Burg Gibiegenstein. The class I was guiding was the year before last. There was a girl (young woman, of course) who was preparing her final year’s work. She threw the red-hot metal in the pickle. That made a sizzling sound. I explained that the silver or gold doesn’t like getting a shock like that, and coincidentally, neither did I. My request to refrain was met with a somewhat diminished fire/fluid encounter. It wasn’t red hot anymore but still warm enough to make a sound. Funny enough, a week ago Beate did the same thing again, 12 years later. I discovered that Beate’s horoscope was a fire in water and a water-in-fire dominated constellation. I don’t know what that means, but I thought that it was remarkable. Beate also made a piece called Fire on the water, and I made a ring for her with rubies and aquamarines. 
 In the beginning, I had the impression that wherever I was standing Beate stood in front of me. I made an appointment with Rudolf (Kocea) in a bar, and all over sudden, Beate was sitting between us. I actually suspected that Beate threw that hot metal in the pickle to attract my attention. But she has never given me a definite confirmation of this suspicion.
 I know that her account of our meeting was that wherever she was sitting, I happened to stand behind or next to her. So, what this proves is that history should always be taken with a certain measure of suspicion.

Philip Sajet, AmberGluering, 2014, ring, amber, glue, 39 x 26.5 x 10 mm, photo: Beate KlockmannPhilip Sajet, AmberGluering, 2014, ring, amber, glue, 39 x 26.5 x 10 mm, photo: Beate Klockmann

 
Where do you live? Are your studios near each other? Do they look the same?

 Beate Klockmann: Since 2012, we have lived in a little village next to Hanau in Frankfurt. We are both strangers here. We work in the same studio. Our studio is always changing. There is a continuing discussion about how it should be organized.
 Philip Sajet: In Bruchköbel, near Hanau, where Beate teaches in the Hanau Zeichen Akademie. But, a few months a year I live in a house we own in Latour de France, a winemakers village where we lived for many months in the past. Funnily enough, the wine of that region can actually be bought cheaper in supermarkets near Munich. We have made the living room of our house in Germany into a studio.
 Beate KlockmannBeate Klockmann, The green house ring, 2013, ring, 35 x 20 x 20 mm, photo: artist
Do you use the same equipment?
 Beate Klockmann:  In general, we use the same equipment. There are only a couple of instruments that are personal.
 Philip Sajet: We share the big tools, and we use our own smaller pliers and files.
Philip SajetPhilip Sajet, JadeGluering, 2014, ring, jade, glue, 40 x 27 x 12.5 mm, photo: Beate Klockmann
 
Do you interact during your studio time?

 Beate Klockmann: Our days are not really divided into studio time and relaxing time. The studio is the center of our house. So, everybody is doing things there, such as listening to music or reading books. We discuss things there as we paint, often with our daughter. Philip also has apprentices, and he makes music there, too. The studio is also the place where the birds are living. So, there is a lot of interaction. If all goes well, it creates a good atmosphere for making jewelry along with other things.
Philip Sajet: Our hours differ. I am a daytime worker, and Beate likes the nights. In a way, we work shifts. We do interact, of course, but usually it is small talk. We do ask each other for advice, but more often than not, it is not followed. But, a major thing we give each other is courage. When one of us wants to make a piece, we spend a lot of materials and time in making it very particular, which turns out to be very expensive as well. So, there is an inclination not to do it, but we say to each other, “you really must make that piece.” That is very nice.
 
Give us a description of how your workday goes.
 Beate Klockmann: Because I am a teacher at the Zeichen Akademie in Hanau, I have only one to two days a week to work in the studio on my own work. I like to work together with Philip, and sometimes with an apprentice, but the daytime can be very chaotic because of our daughter Jura. That’s why I like to work during the nighttime so much. I have the illusion that I have endless time to work, and I can be alone with my work for a while. 
 Philip Sajet: I have the luxury of getting a late start. I wake up at 8:30am, have coffee in bed, then shower and do administrative chores. At around 12:00, I might finally start working. Then, two hours later, I make lunch. Right now, the daily meal is brown rice in the Japanese rice cooker, peeled aubergine, tomatoes, sesame paste, seaweed, eggs, sesame seeds, sunflower seeds, pepper, thyme, garlic in the peel (en chemise, as it is called in French), and at the end, I add oil olive and sea salt. It’s so easy. Just throw these ingredients in, close the lid, and half-an-hour later, it’s done. I try to get a full six hours of work. My best hours are my last one-and-one-half. If I get that a minimum of five days a week, I can reach my aim of an average of one piece a week.
Philip SajetPhilip Sajet, Portuguese_split, 2013, ring, replica of the diamond “Portuguese,” rock crystal, gold, silver, enamel, 37 x 33.5 x 12 mm, photo: Beate Klockmann
 
What questions do you ask yourself when preparing to make a piece?
Beate Klockmann: I look at my messy table and ask, or better, I try to feel which piece motivates me to work on it, and then I simply start to work on it. In general, I am just happy if I am working, so I try not to think about it too much before I start.
 Philip Sajet: Is it technically feasible? Is it pretty or ugly? (Not that one or the other might decide an outcome.) How high are the investment costs? Will it fall well on the body? Does it have a meaning? Is there a necessity?
 
You both seem interested in unusual materials and stones. How do you decide, for example, to use the sole of a shoe in a necklace? 
Beate Klockmann: Once in a while, I like to take bigger risks in my experiments, also in choosing materials—such as glass, textile, enamel, paper—but after a while, I always go back to working with gold.
 Philip Sajet: In my case, in my mind’s eye, I put everything I see in a circle. So, the inside curves of the soles placed that way make an almost perfect, big new circle. Then, the next thought is, “Oh this is really too awkward, and nobody will ever wear that!” There is also a reference to the Paul Simon song (I recently discovered that we have the same initials) Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes. Well, diamonds would have been a lot of investment, so I went with rubies, and it was a more affordable one. Also, the color went well, the red with brown.
Do you think you influence each other, and if so, how?
 Beate Klockmann: Sure, we influence each other. The good thing is that I always have a highly critical public in the house. So, I feel well trained in handling the different reactions when I exhibit my work. On the other hand, Philip gives me special compliments if I have a bad day. In general, we both try to support the other in whatever strange thing we are doing. If we didn’t, then everything would become boring.
 Philip Sajet: Yes, definitely. We maintain a high level of quality, and we judge how major a piece is and whether it is boring or not. We aren’t shy about saying what we think to one another.
 
What have you seen, read, or heard lately that has excited you?
 Beate Klockmann: I read a little book called Montauk by Max Frisch. I liked it because it was full of wisdom and very nicely written. But really, to be honest, the highlights I get at the moment are the intelligent expressions of our daughter. At six-years-old, her drawings, conversations, and so many essential things are on the table, and with such a surprising clearness, that I enjoy it a lot. 
 Philip Sajet: Lion Feuchtwanger’s The Oppermann’s is deeply disturbing and dramatically describes the destruction of a family in an intolerant totalitarian regime. But there are so many magnificent books. American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis is also a magnanimously written novel about a very ugly person.
The music I listen to a lot lately is from Nils Frahm, and always Bach, of course.
I know it’s very fashionable, but I love (almost) all the movies from the Coen brothers.
My absolute favorite is No Country for Old Men, and my absolute favorite scene is where Anton Chigurh (Xavier Bardem) confronts the gas station man by flipping “his” traveling quarter.
 

Beate KlockmannBeate Klockmann, Squashed 1, 2013, necklace, 400 x 150 x 2 mm, photo: artist

 

Galerie Rosemarie Jäger

Wintergasse 13
65239 Hochheim
Germany
T +49 (0) 6146 2203
F +49 (0) 6146 601068
galerie@rosemarie–jaeger.de

08/03/2014

EXPO ‘mineralART 2014 – Between Layers’ – Staatlichen Antikensammlungen, Munich (DE) – 13 Mars- 11 Mai 2014

 SCHMUCK 2014 – Munich – 12-18 Mars 2014

Staatlichen Antikensammlungen, Preisverleihung mineralART 2014

« between layers – Innenwelten des Achats »
“between layers – worlds within agate”

The prize-giving will take place on Thursday, 13 March 2014, as part of a celebratory event inside the Munich State Collection of Antiques. The competition-winning pieces and other outstanding works will be on display here during SCHMUCK 2014 and until 11 May 2014 during museum opening hours.

After the opening, please join the CURRENT OBSESSION PARTY!!! :
Thursday, 13th March 2014, 9 – 12 pm
84 GHz, Georgenstraße 84, Munich

Flyer mineralART

Award ceremony & opening: Thursday, 13th March 2014, 7:00 pm
State Collection of Antiques, Königsplatz, Munich.mineralART 2014“between layers – worlds within agate”

 mineralART 2014 is proud to present the work of following artists in Munich :

Claudia Adam — Penka Arabova-Pasheva — Paula Bahadian — Frans Beelen — Tereza Borlova –
Carolin Denter — Katharina DettarPatrícia DominguesMatthias DyerTanja Emmert – Elvira Golombosi — Lina Goltsios — Elena Gorbunova — Taehee In — Levani Jishkariani — Christina Karababa – Yeonkyung Kim — Beate Klockmann — Karina Lazauskaitė — Typhaine Le Monnier — Tianqi Li –  Cristina Martí Mató –  Judy McCaigViktoria Münzker – Tom Munsteiner — Julia Obermaier — Ruudt Peters — Hester Popma-van de Kolk — Sari Räthel — Philip Sajet — Nils Schmalenbach — Kvetoslava Flora Sekanova –  Giovanni Sicuro — Supavee Sirinkraporn — Jörg Stoffel — Karen Vanmol — Karol Weisslechner — Zindzi Wijminga — Getter Ziugand   ………..

An overwhelming number of 275 pieces by 161 participants ………………

#SCHMUCK14 -  MineralART competition - Annamaria ZanellaAnnamaria Zanella
MineralART - Sari RäthelSari Räthel
MINERALart- Li TianqiLi Tianqi
MineralART - Tatjana GiorgadseTatjana Giorgadse
MineralART - Julia ObermaierJulia Obermaier
MINERALart- Giovanni SicuroGiovanni Sicuro
MINERALart- Philip SajetPhilip Sajet

 

 

Staatlichen Antikensammlungen
Königsplatz 1
80333 München
www.mineralart.de
Di-So 10-17, Mi 10-20 Uhr

 

 

10/12/2013

EXPO ‘PURPLE’ – Steinbeisser at the Lloyd Hotel & Cultural Embassy , Amsterdam (NL) – 14-15 Dec. 2013

The Steinbeisser Jewellery Show at the Lloyd Hotel & Cultural Embassy is an annual event showcasing the work of established and upcoming artists. The show’s theme of this edition is ‘Purple’. A color of contradiction for which the artists specially created or selected pieces never shown in the Netherlands before.

The Steinbeisser Jewellery Show2013
(Philip Sajet necklace)

The theme Purple is a color of contradiction, it consists of the warm and comforting red and the cold and clean blue. Purple stands for the mystery of life as it also stands for the mystery of death. Our request to the participants was, what is your most perfect color purple?

On exhibit are works from Philip Sajet Edgar Mosa Andi Gut Evert NijlandTarja TuupanenRosa Nogués Freixas Natalie Luder Beate Klockmann –  Sofia Björkman Maki OkamotoTobias AlmNina Sajet Nils Hint Volker AtropsJorge ManillaManuel Vilhena  Märta Mattsson.

 

Marta Mattson
Marta Mattson
Sofia Bjorkman - reflective stones http://www.sofiabjorkman.se/
Sofia Bjorkman – reflective stones
EXPO 'PURPLE' - Steinbeisser at the Lloyd Hotel & Cultural Embassy , Amsterdam (NL) - 14-15 Dec. 2013 dans Andi GUT (CH) refective_stone

 

Steinbeisser
at the Lloyd Hotel & Cultural Embassy
on the 4th Floor Platform
Oostelijke Handelskade 34
Amsterdam

09/12/2013

EXPO ‘Papallona / Mariposa / Butterfly’ – Museu de Ciències Naturals de Granollers, Granollers (Spain) – 29 Nov. 2013 – 2 Mars 2014

Papallona / Mariposa / Butterfly

Museu de Ciències Naturals de Granollers

Check the online catalogue here

papallona .....

Paticipating artists:
Adriano Castoro — Alexander Blank — Ana Toledo — Andrea Wagner Anne Wiedau — Annika Lange — Arek Wolski — Atsuko Fujishima — Attai ChenAtty TantivitBeate KlockmannBernhard Schobinger — Bruno Sievering Tornow — Chiara ScarpittiChristina KarababaCristina Martí Mató — Chang Wei Hsuan — Dana SeachugaDavid Bielander — Davide Zambon — Diana TipoiaDonald Friedlich Edu TarínEmi FukudaEva BurtonFanny Agnier – Felieke Ven Der Leest Florie Dupont — Francesca Ferrario — Gabi Dziuba — Gésine HackenbergGrego GarcíaGregory Larin — Hans-Joachim Härtel — Hector Lasso – Helen BrittonHerman Hermsen — Horst Feiler – Hu Jun — Jiro Kamata — Jordi Sànchez – Karina Lazauskaite — Karl Fritsch Karolina Bik Katharina Dettar — Kathleen Fink — Katja Prins – Kecskés Orsolya – Kvetoslava Flora Sekanova — Lisa Walker – Maarja Niinemägi — Manon Van Kouswijk Manuel VilhenaMari Ishikawa María Mamkaeva Marina Elenskaya/Christian Van Der Kaap — Marta Roca Solé — Martin Wipperfürth — Martina PontMartina TornowMelanie IsverdingMirei TakeuchiMontserrat LacombaNatalie Luder Nicolás Estrada Nina Sajet –  Noon Passama Otto KünzliPatrícia DominguesPavel Opocenský — Peter Skubic — Petr Dvorak Petra ZimmermanPhilip Sajet Ramon Puig CuyásRobean Visschers Rosa Nogués FreixasRudolf Kocea — Ryuichiro Nakamura –  Sandra Murray – Sara Shahak – Sehee Um –  Silvia Walz — Simone Knust –  Slawomir Fijalkowski — Stefan Heuser — Stefan Todorov – Stefano Marchetti — Surasekk Yushiwat — Suzan Rezac — Tabea ReuleckeTaweesak MolsawatTerhi Tolvanen –  Theodora Vasilopoulou –  Therese Hilbert — Thomas Dierks — Ulrich Reithofer – Uta Feiler — Vera SiemundVolker AtropsXavier Monclús.

Arek Wolski, Brooch, 2013Arek Wolski – Brooch: Untitled, 2013 -  Steel pins

Philip Sajet, Ring, 2013Philip Sajet – ring  Papallona/Butterfly, 2013  Niello on silver, enamel on silver, gold

Ulrich Reithofer, Ring, 2013Ulrich ReithoferRing: Grey on green with gold butterfly, 2013Jade, rock crystal, gold leaf

Marta Roca Solé, Pendant, 2013Marta Roca Solé – Pendant: Madame butterfly, 2013 – Glued newspaper, oxidised silver, cotton thread

Fanny Agnier - "papallona" ring Fanny Agnier – « papallona » ring
Beate Klockmann - 'papallona d'or' brooch
Beate Klockmann - ‘papallona d’or’ brooch 
papallona  - Christina Karababa (GR) 'crisalide' pendentif
Christina Karababa (GR) ‘crisalide’ pendentif
papallona - Karolina Bik -  'graphium' ring - peridot, argent oxydé
 Karolina Bik -  ‘graphium’ ring – peridot, argent oxydé
papallona  -Montserrat Lacomba - broche 'papallona blanca' - cobre, esmalte
Montserrat Lacomba - broche ‘papallona blanca’ – cobre, esmalte
papallona - Katharina Dettar - brooch - labradorite, or
Katharina Dettar - brooch – labradorite, or

papallona -Gesine Hackenberg - 'papallona de mandarina' brooch - cuivre
Gesine Hackenberg – ‘papallona de mandarina’ brooch – cuivre

 

Museu de Ciències Naturals de Granollers
Carrer de Palaudàries 102
08402 – Granollers
Spain
Telephone: 938 70 96 51
website: www.museugranollersciencies.org
mail: m.granollers.cn@diba.cat

06/04/2013

EXPO ‘Mariposa/papallona/Butterfly’ – Amaranto joies, Barcelona (ES) – 4 Avril-18 Mai 2013

Mariposa/Papallona/Butterfly - Amaranto Joies 2013

Mariposa/Papallona/Butterfly

Una exposición comisariada por PHILIP SAJET
 55 creadores = 55 mariposas

Philip-Sajet-Mariposa .jpgPhilip Sajet

“There are as many butterflies as that are people, probably even many more.
Mystica tells us, that departed souls sometimes return as butterflies to comfort and reasure us.
But whatever the case, one thing is sure in this life they live short.
They are light and extremely agile and in the eyes of some are considered as very beautiful
The only animal who looks alive while not being it.
That is their tragedy. To be pinned on a board. 
The butterfly for the artist is also a metaphor for life.
How big or small, how light or heavy do you make it?
It was my personal curiosity to ask artists whose work fascinate / intrigue me to show me their Butterfly.
Yes almost as intimate as this question sounds, so intimate in a way it is.”   Philip Sajet
*
Petr Dvorak - Garnet/garnet/Butterfly  My garnet/garnet/titanium butterfly is a transformation of my perception of the world, my vision of impressions, desires and illusions. Within each of us is a butterflyPetr Dvorak - Garnet/garnet/Butterfly 
My garnet/garnet/titanium butterfly is a transformation of my perception of the world, my vision of impressions, desires and illusions. Within each of us is a butterfly
Peter Skubic - Butterfly  2013
Peter Skubic - Butterfly  2013
The pieces is a butterfly in my still. It means the reflecting steel-sheats makes the piece as well as invisible,
because mirrors are invisible. You can only see the reflection of the surface and the colour and imagine spaces.
I make it from a suggestion of Philip Sajet.
Patrícia Domingues  Descanso  Fotografía Manuel OcañaPatricia Domingues  Descanso – broche Fotografía Manuel Ocaña
 Ramon Puig Cuyás “Rerum natura I” Ramon Puig Cuyàs – “Rerum natura I”
 Vera Siemund Vera Siemund
I always liked to mix different quotations in my pieces.

To do a butterfly seemed to be very easy, but suddenly this insect really gave me problems. It became so serious but at the same time too sweet. I had to leave nature immediately and go back to the topics I am familiar with.
 Manon Van Kouswijk Butterfly. Originally made for the 10 year anniversary of PEAH, a jewellery label run by Felix Lindner and Samantha Font-Sala.Manon Van Kouswijk Butterfly.
Originally made for the 10 year anniversary of PEAH, a jewellery label run by Felix Lindner and Samantha Font-Sala.
Fanny Agnier ButterflyFanny Agnier Butterfly
Philip-SajetPhilip Sajet
Andrea Wagner - Lepidoptera Reef Enclave Andrea Wagner – Lepidoptera Reef Enclave
Lisa WalkerLisa Walker
 Robean  Visschers Butter Fly Robean Visschers – butter-fly brooch
As a child I was already wondering how « things » got their name. Sometimes a word or a name is a combination of 2 or more words. also in the case of the Butterfly. Why?? I combined a pack of butter with a fly. Quess what? It doesnt look like a butterfly. For me its a strang name for a beautiful animal.
Silvia Walz Morpho con alas desplegadasSilvia Walz -   Morpho con alas desplegadas –
El morpho es una mariposa azul que vive la mayor parte del tiempo en el bosque con las alas plegadas. Sin embargo cuando esta en búsqueda de compañero, sale de su escondite, desplega las alas y vuela en lo alto.
Atty Tantivit - Lepidopterophobia
Atty Tantivit – Lepidopterophobia
Gregory LarinGregory Larin
Florie DupontFlorie Dupont
 Eva Burton Heteroneuma  Eva Burton Heteroneuma
Tabea-ReuleckeTabea Reulecke
Beate Klockmann  Gold ButterflyBeate Klockmann   Gold Butterfly
Grego GarcíaGrego García
 Edu Tarin Alas

Edu Tarin  – Alas
La crisálida dejó su esqueleto olvidado para ver nacer las alas de mariposa. Alas que llevará a través del viento. Alas que el cuerpo posee y que maneja a su antojo.
Chang Wei Hsuan Chang Wei Hsuan
 Manuel Vilhena    brooch Manuel Vilhena  The brooch comes with a book, The book is (ia a way) the statement for the piece. Fotografía Neumuller
Surasekk Yushiwat Butterfly Effect. The keyword of this product come from question “Butterfly colors this world but how they color anyone who wear t-shirts ?”. The graphic of butterfly effect come from difference movements during daily routine activity of wearer in each days, so there are no cliché graphical.Surasekk Yushiwat Butterfly Effect. The keyword of this product come from question “Butterfly colors this world but how they color anyone who wear t-shirts ?”. The graphic of butterfly effect come from difference movements during daily routine activity of wearer in each days, so there are no cliché graphical.

 

Amaranto joies
Sant Domènec 23
08012 Barcelona
tel. 93 217 14 40
amarantojoies@d-dos.com
www.amarantojoies.com

 

 

29/08/2012

EXPO ‘Barocco’ – Museum of Art & Crafts ITAMI, Japan – 8-30 Sept. 2012

BaroccoBaroque Pearl Jewelleries by 24 Artists  08.09.2012 15:00 ~

Chitose Ohchi × Jun KonishiBarocco - Baroque Pearl Jewelleries by 24 Artist  08.09.2012 15:00~  Special Talk : Chitose Ohchi × Jun Konishi    The Museum of Art & Crafts ITAMI  www.mac-itami.comKarin Seufert - necklaces for Barocco Exhibition  Karin Seufert necklaces

« `Baroque-water-pearls´ got their name, next to other aspects, because of their irregular outer shape. And just because of this special shape, they are sometimes also categorist as `scrap water pearls´. They are not first choice, their shapes don’t fit into special norms and conceptions, they are not perfect round with a smooth straight surface and their luster is broken due to their vivid appearances.
The image, which came up into my mind was to hide every visible detail because they do not fulfill certain expectations. I thought to put them into textile in a way that you only can feel them. It is then your fantasy, which gives the pearls their beauty without seeing them ever.
But nevertheless pearls are always beautiful just because of their unique shapes, their special colors, their sizes and their luster. And every pearl is individual because of this. It is a creation of nature and this beauty is worth to be shown, unless different expectations.
To emphasize this idea, I decided to not hide them.
It seemed to be much more interesting to place them into transparent textile, instead of hides them totally inside an opaque material. Now it is possible to see a bit of their shapes, to feel the weight, to hear the sound when the pearls touch each other and to move them like you want.
The design, which was the result of this idea, is a square tube.
It should be as minimal as possible to give all attention to the pearls inside. The textile I used for this tube/bag is black organza silk. Depending on where the pearls are, the form of the bag will be different and is made by the movement of the pearls. » Karin Seufert

Karin Seufert - detailKarin Seufert – detail 1

Karin Seufert - detail 2 - for Barocco ExhibitionKarin Seufert – detail 2JIRO KAMATA -   Pearl Ring 2009 for Barocco ExhibitionJiro Kamata  Pearl Ring 2009
« So,”what does it feels like to be inside of a pearl?” With such a simple questions, these rings were coming. it’s just like a taking a taboo in my mind.When I shaved it, I found another pearl inside. As if you were in a time machine inspecting the history of pearls.Here are the extraordinary pearl rings.« Jiro Kamata - "So,”what does it feels like to be inside of a pearl?” Jiro Kamata « So,”what does it feels like to be inside of a pearl?”

Jun Konishi - Natural shapes and  artificial shapes.Jun Konishi – Natural shapes and  artificial shapesFelix Lindner - "How to put pearls in my jewellery?  Felix Lindner  - brooch, orange plastic & pearls
« How to put pearls in my jewellery? So easy – it was love at first sight – I guess I am not the first one – later on I try to classify, making small groups, some pearls are attracting me more then others, but in almost every kind I can find details that are beautiful – I am amazed! » – „ice cream“  Felix Lindner - „pimp my ride“       Felix Lindner – „pimp my ride“ – I can pimp your tin toy ride… cultured bubble pearl wheels – other parts were taken from my work “les nouveaux classiques”… „Babe we’ll ride in style movin’ all along…“Beate Klockman neckpiece  (for Barocco Exhibition)Beate Klockman neckpieceBeate Klockman neckpiece (detail) -  Beate Klockman neckpiece (detail) –
« The landscape around here inspires me. It is very rough and wild. The weather is changing fast, everything moves. Only the mountains are a constant. I find perfect harmonies in this chaos and bring those to the body. I create Jewelry in a same way as the nature grows. Letting the same coincidental imperfections, decide the character of the jewel. I make jewelry like drawings. The Pearls are the shiny dots in my composition… » Beate KlockmanAnnelies Planteijdt -  city-White place 2009  Annelies Planteijdt -  city-White place 2009Annelies Planteijdt necklace (EXPO Barocco)Annelies Planteijdt -  city-White place 2009

Mariko Yamashita - 'party' necklace - êarl, 18k, paint (EXPO Barocco)Mariko Yamashita – ‘party’ necklace – pearl, 18k, paintPhilip Sajet necklace (EXPO Barocco)Philip Sajet necklace & detail

Mirei Takeuchi - necklaces - pearl, panty (EXPO Barocco)Mirei Takeuchi – necklaces – pearl, panty

Mirei Takeuchi détails necklace redMirei Takeuchi - détails 2

Mirei Takeuchi détails necklacesIris Bodemer  (for Barocco Exhibition)Iris BodemerRobean Visschers earrings   Robean Visschers earringsEXPO Barocco - Katja Prins ringsKatja Prins ringsEXPO Barocco - Karolina Bik  necklaceKarolina Bik  necklaceEXPO Barocco - Florie DupontFlorie Dupont brooches

Dorothea Dahnick (EXPO Barocco) “floral swing”Dorothea Dahnick – “floral swing”

 

 

The Museum of Art & Crafts ITAMI 
2-5-28 Miyanomae, Itami, Hyogo 664-0895
Phone: 072-772-5557
Fax: 072-772-5558
http://www.mac-itami.com/

 

 

22/06/2012

EXPO ‘CONTEMPORARY GOLD’ – Caroline Van Hoek gallery, Bruxelles (BE) – 24 Mai-30 Juin 2012

BEATE KLOCKMANN : « CONTEMPORARY GOLD »

EXPO 'CONTEMPORARY GOLD' - Caroline Van Hoek gallery, Bruxelles (BE) - 24 Mai-30 Juin 2012 dans Beate KLOCKMANN (DE)

 

 Beschwingte Ringkunst: Beate Klockmann, Gold

In any case, these gold pieces of hers are always more architectural, with structure without being repetitive abstract geometry, but rather ingenious conceptions never seen before in this metal.

   Ring | Beate Klockmann. Amber, copper, silver, gold platedamber ring

rings / Beate Klockmannschalen ring
Beate Klockmann ring: gold and jadefeuerringen
"Kubus Kette" from Beate Klockmann. www.iocale.comkubus kette

Caroline Van Hoek gallery
Rue Van Eyck 57
1050 Bruxelles
t. 02 / 644 45 11
info@carolinevanhoek.be

http://www.carolinevanhoek.

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