Chadour-Sampson, Beatriz, Sandra Hindman and Carla van de Puttelaar
Reference : 122507
(2022)
ISBN : 9781912168021
Chadour-Sampson, Beatriz, Sandra Hindman and Carla van de Puttelaar: Liber Amicorum in Honour of Diana Scarisbrick. A Life in Jewels. London: 2022. 280 pages, 250 colour illustrations. Hardback. 26 x 21cms. A celebration of Diana Scarisbrick's contributions to the field of jewellery history. Twenty scholars present essays that trace Scarisbrick's career and explore a range of topics including the history of jewellery from the ancient to the modern, discussions of monumental collections such as the Alice and Louis Koch Collection, and recollections of working with Scarisbrick. Includes an extensive bibliography of Scarisbrick's publications.
A celebration of Diana Scarisbrickâs contributions to the field of jewellery history. Twenty scholars present essays that trace Scarisbrickâs career and explore a range of topics including the history of jewellery from the ancient to the modern, discussions of monumental collections such as the Alice and Louis Koch Collection, and recollections of working with Scarisbrick. Includes an extensive bibliography of Scarisbrickâs publications. Text in English
PAUL HOLBERTON PUBLISHING ED.
LIVRE A L’ETAT DE NEUF. EXPEDIE SOUS 3 JOURS OUVRES. NUMERO DE SUIVI COMMUNIQUE AVANT ENVOI, EMBALLAGE RENFORCE. EAN:9781915401021
, Arnoldsche, 2016 Hardcover, 296 pag. 30 x 29.5 cm, 219 ills. in colour and 4 in b/w. *New . ISBN 9783897904705.
This publication documents for the first time the extraordinary life of Barbara Cartlidge (b. 1922 in Berlin) who had fled Germany in 1938. Her creative talents, entrepreneurial spirit and political activism are illustrated through her early years in London from the 1940s to 1970s. Little known is her success as a jeweller which resulted in press attention from fashion magazines such as Vogue and Harper?s Bazaar and, in 1960, a solo exhibition at Heal?s, leading in modern design. Late 1960?s and Barbara?s involvement with Pace Gallery brought about a meeting with Ralph Turner and their collaboration to create Electrum Gallery in 1971: the first gallery for exhibiting exclusively contemporary artist jewellery. The story of the next 36 years of Barbara?s involvement in Electrum Gallery, until her retirement in 2007, is told through the words and images of 70 internationally renowned artist jewellers who describe this strong, determined woman and the significance of the gallery for the wider world of contemporary jewellery. Electrum Gallery represented many hundreds of jewellers from around the world and made London an international platform for contemporary artist jewellery.
, Arnoldsche Art Publishers, 304 pages, 24 x 30 cm. 425 illustrations, with 277 in colour. Cloth with dust-jacket. Text in English and German. . ISBN 9783925369766.
Friedrich Becker was a goldsmith of world renown and undoubtedly one of the most outstanding artistic personalities of our day, truly altering the course of goldsmiths' work in the latter half of the 20th century. Becker was the creator of kinetic jewellery and well known as a sculptor and designer. His work is collected by many major museums and has featured in inumerable exhibitions. The purity of form in his work laid the foundations for a new aesthetic style in jewelllery. Stemming from his preoccupation with precision, he combined high standards of workmanship with a supreme sublety. In his jewellery "wearable" art was born. The book focuses on the extraordinary genius of Becker, a master craftsman and mentor, who would have welcomed this exploration of his work to inspire artists and art historians alike. A fascinating survey of the versatile creativity of the artist, who as an internationally acknowledged gold jeweller and designer of kinetic jewellery left his mark on the goldsmithery of the second half of the 20th century.
, Arnoldsche, 2019 Hardcover with dusjacket 304 pages, 24 30 cm, approx. 600 colour ills. Text; English / German. ISBN 9783897905160.
The Alice and Louis Koch Collection of finger rings was originally collated by a jeweller from Frankfurt am Main, once described as the German ?Cartier and Faberg ?. By 1909 the collection comprised 1,722 rings from Antiquity to 1900. Ren Lalique, a contemporary of the time, was included, undoubtedly as a moderniser of the ring form. In the past twenty-five years the fourth generation of the family continued where Louis Koch and his wife Alice left off and expanded the collection to include rings from the twentieth and twenty-first century. This publication will present the complete collection of contemporary rings, today kept in the Swiss National Museum, Zurich. Nearly 600 rings by artist jewellers from around the world document how these miniature works of art have become modern sculptures showcasing new materials and techniques, daring designs and current themes.