Brooch
1961-1962 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Over the centuries artists have often brought new ideas to jewellery design. In Britain, in the 1950s and ’60s, they contributed greatly to the growth of individual expression, perhaps because they were working outside any commercial constraints.
In 1961 designs by artists were shown at the International Exhibition of Modern Jewellery, held at the Goldsmiths’ Hall, London. This groundbreaking exhibition aimed to ‘stimulate public interest in jewellery as an art and to encourage British designers in this field’. Many artists were invited to contribute, some making jewellery for the first time. They were sent a small box of wax, from which they modelled a piece and returned it to the organisers for casting in silver or bronze.
These artists’ jewels reflected a diversity of influences. Often rough-textured and heavy, they added a fascinating new dimension to the use of metals. As the catalogue said, they ‘proved, if proof be needed, that cheap materials need not mean artistic insignificance, and that creative imagination shown with one visual art can very often be diverted to another’. These precepts, heralding alternative priorities within jewellery, helped consolidate the position of the emerging artist-jewellery movement.
Bernard Meadows was a British modernist sculptor, who became Professor of Sculpture at the Royal College of Art, London (1960-80) and was the sculptor Henry Moore’s first assistant.
In 1961 designs by artists were shown at the International Exhibition of Modern Jewellery, held at the Goldsmiths’ Hall, London. This groundbreaking exhibition aimed to ‘stimulate public interest in jewellery as an art and to encourage British designers in this field’. Many artists were invited to contribute, some making jewellery for the first time. They were sent a small box of wax, from which they modelled a piece and returned it to the organisers for casting in silver or bronze.
These artists’ jewels reflected a diversity of influences. Often rough-textured and heavy, they added a fascinating new dimension to the use of metals. As the catalogue said, they ‘proved, if proof be needed, that cheap materials need not mean artistic insignificance, and that creative imagination shown with one visual art can very often be diverted to another’. These precepts, heralding alternative priorities within jewellery, helped consolidate the position of the emerging artist-jewellery movement.
Bernard Meadows was a British modernist sculptor, who became Professor of Sculpture at the Royal College of Art, London (1960-80) and was the sculptor Henry Moore’s first assistant.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Gilded silver set with a diamond |
Brief description | Textured oval brooch of gilded silver set with a diamond, designed by Bernard Meadows 1961. |
Physical description | Oval brooch of gilded silver with a swirling, textured surface in relief and set with a diamond on the lower left-hand edge. Secured with a pin at the back. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | Hallmarks for London 1961 and H.J. Company |
Object history | Historical significance: Awarded third prize, De Beers British Jewellery Competition, 1961. |
Summary | Over the centuries artists have often brought new ideas to jewellery design. In Britain, in the 1950s and ’60s, they contributed greatly to the growth of individual expression, perhaps because they were working outside any commercial constraints. In 1961 designs by artists were shown at the International Exhibition of Modern Jewellery, held at the Goldsmiths’ Hall, London. This groundbreaking exhibition aimed to ‘stimulate public interest in jewellery as an art and to encourage British designers in this field’. Many artists were invited to contribute, some making jewellery for the first time. They were sent a small box of wax, from which they modelled a piece and returned it to the organisers for casting in silver or bronze. These artists’ jewels reflected a diversity of influences. Often rough-textured and heavy, they added a fascinating new dimension to the use of metals. As the catalogue said, they ‘proved, if proof be needed, that cheap materials need not mean artistic insignificance, and that creative imagination shown with one visual art can very often be diverted to another’. These precepts, heralding alternative priorities within jewellery, helped consolidate the position of the emerging artist-jewellery movement. Bernard Meadows was a British modernist sculptor, who became Professor of Sculpture at the Royal College of Art, London (1960-80) and was the sculptor Henry Moore’s first assistant. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | CIRC.15-1962 |
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Record created | March 26, 2008 |
Record URL |
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