Tag Archives: Contemporary Jewelry

The Time is Come, The Day Draweth Near

The Hella Jongerius Exhibit at Collective 2 is finally coming together, and we couldn’t be more excited! Because we’re so good at sneaking peaks for you, here are some previews of what’s to come this weekend. Remember, Collective 2 runs from May 8 through the 11th at Skylight at Moynihan Station, and Hella’s exhibit is a special solo of her work. Be there!

Janine05051218_2Drumroll, curtain, welcome!

Janine05051218A snippet of Hella’s collab work with Vitra. We’re only revealing fragments of the show, appropriately in accordance with the concept of the installation.

Janine05051219_1What’s in the box? If it interesting enough to hold the attention of a bunch of college guys, it’s gotta be worth seeing.

Janine05051220_3

Janine05051221Murray in his element. That’s the light bulb that goes off when Murray gets a new idea. It’s proportionate to his brilliance.

Janine05051229So close!

 

Interior Design Fashions a Material ConneXion

Monday morning means yet another exciting day at the Bureau, this time in the company of Interior Design Magazine’s Editor in Chief Cindy Allen and Managing Editor Helene Oberman. The project is an exciting cross-collaboration of fashion,  art and interiors that features Cecile Zu Hohenlohe’s sculptural rings and the latest additions to Material ConneXion’s library. That’s all we can say for now, but look for it in the upcoming edition of Interior Design! Fine, you can have this sneak peak to hold you over until then. Just this once.

photo 4Setting up for the shoot.

photo 2Photographer Paul Godwin and Interior Design Magazine’s Cindy Allen staging the show.photo 3 (1)Artist at work.

photo 5(L-R) Helene Oberman, Cindy Allen and Paul Godwin contemplating.

 

photo 3The stars of the show.

Who Said it Can’t All Be ArcoBalenos and Butterflies?

The results are in, and Cecile’s Rings are currently being highlighted in a front page feature on L’ArcoBaleno! The design collector’s dream site chose Cecile Von Hohenlohe’s jewels, available exclusively through the Moss Bureau, and now in the L’ArcoBaleno shop,  as an Editor’s Pick. See what they had to say below, and visit the site to browse the rest of Moss Bureau’s unique collection for yourself. Screen Shot 2014-03-27 at 11.48.00 AM

Screen Shot 2014-03-27 at 11.51.34 AM


Screen Shot 2014-03-27 at 11.51.51 AMScreen Shot 2014-03-27 at 11.52.09 AMScreen Shot 2014-03-27 at 11.52.28 AMScreen Shot 2014-03-27 at 11.52.39 AM

Rhianna Gets the Royal Treatment

Have you seen this month’s Vogue cover story? The one featuring Rhianna in princess Cecile zu Hohenlohe jewels? Yeah, that one. Screen Shot 2014-03-13 at 1.12.17 PM

Contemporary Jewelry. The book. Being signed. Wednesday Sept 25. At the Bureau.

Image

This is the cover. Damian Skinner is the editor. Published with the AJF, which stands for the Art Jewelry Forum. As if you didn’t already know that.  Click the book for more info and to reserve a space. 

Curiously, the prostitutes themselves preferred gold and diamonds

According to Susanne Klemm, the REDLIGHT jeweler. She said, last night at the Case Side chat at Moss, that her Amsterdam redlight district workspace still had a bed in it when she moved all her studio tools in. Ewwwwwww. And the working girls were still around during the year she worked there and she tried to interest them in her contemporary jewelry, but they weren’t into it. Unlike the working girls (and guys) in attendance at the chat. Look at them. Rapt. Wouldn’t you be? Sweetheart rings here.

Body Piercing is so over.

 

Ringhp1

Get some medical silver, ladyfingers. Try on a few of  Michelle Lopez’s limited-edition sterling-silver Band-aid mini-rings. You don’t even have to cut yourself, though of course, if you must, you must. Who are we to judge?

Ringhp3

This Beauty is Liable to Be Dangerous…

Threebuttons

Moss is pleased to announce a new project, A CASE STUDY IN CONTEMPORARY JEWELRY, created in collaboration with Gallery Loupe, a leading specialist gallery for Contemporary Studio Jewelry, established in 2006.

Culling the experience and on-going research and passion and knowledge that Gallery Loupe owner Patti Bleicher brings to the field of contemporary jewelry, A CASE STUDY IN CONTEMPORARY JEWELRY will occupy a designated vitrine at MOSS, and feature a series of highly curated exhibitions of unique works in studio jewelry. Each exhibition will feature work by a single international artist – in some cases established, in other cases still undiscovered. The exhibitions, with an agenda to feature 10 -12 pieces, will change approximately every eight weeks. Work will be shown in a spectrum of prices, beginning at $400.

It is our hope that each small, very considered exhibition will, over time, establish this project as an important venue for surveying the evolution of contemporary jewelry.

The first artist to be presented by A CASE STUDY IN CONTEMPORARY JEWELRY is Israeli artist Esther Knobel. Featured will be brooches executed in gorgeous enamels on electroformed copper. 

Leavesthree1

Born is Poland in 1949, Ms. Knobel emigrated with her family to Israel in 1950. Having received her Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Bezalel Academy of Art and Design, Jerusalem, Knobel went on to receive her Master of Fine Arts degree from The Royal College of Art, London. The recipient of numerous awards, including the Alix de Rothschild Foundation Prize for Jewelry Design (Israel, 1986) and the Andrea Bronfman Prize for the Arts(Israel, 2007), the artist’s work is included in the permanent collections of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh, the Museum of Arts and Design, New York and the Israel Museum, Jerusalem, among others. Ms. Knobel currently lives and works in Jerusalem.

Esther Knobel’s work has been shown internationally in numerous solo, joint, and group exhibitions, and received much acclaim due to its content, use of materials, and processes, which have always been highly idiosyncratic. The pieces featured in our first exhibition of her work at Moss are from several of Knobel’s evolving collections of jewelry, including Fossils, Magnets, Hoya Leaves and Pests, and Fruits of the Sea.

Three1

About Fruits of the Sea, Knobel writes in her book, The Mind in the Hand:

“From the depths of the sea, pearls were removed. They are whitish and innocent. But clinging relentlessly to the end of the festive chain are the fruits of the sea: claws, hooks, and stingers. Stubborn, shiny, blood-red, like a flower from the depths, like a candy apple. They issue a warning: This beauty is liable to be dangerous.”

Esther Knobel’s work will be on view March 3rd through April 30th.