Necklace thumbnail 1
Necklace thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Jewellery, Rooms 91, The William and Judith Bollinger Gallery

Necklace

1983 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

In 1983 Tone Vigeland commented, ‘The way I got the idea for the feather series was pure luck. A friend from Bergen came to me with a set of black iron nails. I found that when I hammered them flat, they had a lovely character – almost like black feathers. So in this case, first I discovered the material, and then I found a design to suit it.’

The Norwegian jeweller Tone Vigeland was born into a family of artists. Her early jewellery had the minimal lines and bright surfaces characteristic of Scandinavian design of the late 1950s. From this evolved a more complex and highly individual style.

Silver has remained central to her jewellery, but typically left with a dark patination and frequently matched with a base metal such as steel. In this necklace blue-black steel panel pins have been transformed into soft feathery forms that are then attached to an underlying silver mesh. The necklace shows Vigeland’s ability to create harmonious sculptural pieces with extraordinary fluidity and wearability.

Vigeland’s jewellery has often been compared with medieval chain mail or Viking art, she, however, draws her inspiration from the Norwegian landscape.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Silver, steel, gold and mother-of-pearl
Brief description
Necklace of steel 'feathers', silver and gold, by Tone Vigeland, Norway 1983.
Physical description
Necklace of blackened steel 'feathers' and gold pod-shaped pendants densely covering a flexible silver mesh. The clasp at the back is decorated with an engraved panel of mother of pearl.
Dimensions
  • Of fringe depth: 8.5cm
Summary
In 1983 Tone Vigeland commented, ‘The way I got the idea for the feather series was pure luck. A friend from Bergen came to me with a set of black iron nails. I found that when I hammered them flat, they had a lovely character – almost like black feathers. So in this case, first I discovered the material, and then I found a design to suit it.’

The Norwegian jeweller Tone Vigeland was born into a family of artists. Her early jewellery had the minimal lines and bright surfaces characteristic of Scandinavian design of the late 1950s. From this evolved a more complex and highly individual style.

Silver has remained central to her jewellery, but typically left with a dark patination and frequently matched with a base metal such as steel. In this necklace blue-black steel panel pins have been transformed into soft feathery forms that are then attached to an underlying silver mesh. The necklace shows Vigeland’s ability to create harmonious sculptural pieces with extraordinary fluidity and wearability.

Vigeland’s jewellery has often been compared with medieval chain mail or Viking art, she, however, draws her inspiration from the Norwegian landscape.
Bibliographic reference
A similar necklace can be found in the National Museum of Decorative Arts, Trondheim, Norway, published in: Cecilie Malm Brundtland, Tone Vigeland, Jewellery + Sculpture, Movements in Silver, Stuttgart 2003, p. 63, no. 21
Collection
Accession number
M.42-1984

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Record createdMay 13, 2008
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