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  • Beauty Is in the Eye of the Beholder, Ambre Cardinal. Click to enlarge.Feed Your Head, Kim Gladwin. Click to enlarge.Of a Jewel, Raluca Grada. Click to enlarge.Tessellating Wall Tiles, Jennifer Gray. Click to enlarge.Reflex, Joanna Hemsley. Click to enlarge.In My Dreams, Spoon and I..., Sarah Hurtigkarl. Click to enlarge.Work in Progress for Sikka Collection, Tanvi Kant. Click to enlarge.Untitled, Nina Khazani. Click to enlarge.Diamond Optics, Ha-Na Kim. Click to enlarge.Detail of Times Square, Reeves Painting by Numbers Kit, Stephen Knott, PhD. Click to enlarge.Untitled, Katrine Kristensen. Click to enlarge.Untitled, Ha-Yeon Lee. Click to enlarge.Untitled, JooHyun Lee. Click to enlarge.Conceal and Reveal, Jung-Hsuan Liang. Click to enlarge.Sequence I, Emelica Lidman. Click to enlarge.Untitled, Lyla Marsol. Click to enlarge.Gold Footage I, Alice McLean. Click to enlarge.Eyewear, Emma Montague. Click to enlarge.Untitled, Evelie Mouila. Click to enlarge.Merging, Joo Hyung Park. Click to enlarge.Pill Prosperity, Hannah Pittman. Click to enlarge.Silver Dollar, Laurie Schram. Click to enlarge.A Home from Home, Kerry Seaton. Click to enlarge.Untitled, Julie Usel. Click to enlarge.Seven Helix, Tina Tianhong Zhang. Click to enlarge.
  • Show RCA 2012

    Goldsmithing, Silversmithing, Metalwork & Jewellery

  • ‘A typewritten card gives a date of 1500 BC. And adds a question mark. The necklace is of golden tubes strung on a thread. Each tube is no longer than a child’s fingernail is wide. After each third tube, a beech leaf hangs from the thread, a leaf the same size as a real one. But the leaves of the necklace are of a gold beaten thinner than any natural leaf could be. And on them the leaf’s veins are incised, each incision shining like a platinum hair.

    Worn around the neck, the leaves would flutter against her sternum and collarbone as she walked. When she stood still, they would stir as she breathed, light and metallic, with a crisp sound. To wear this necklace would be to feel protected by every leaf of every tree in the world.'1

    GSM&J respects the history and legacy of our field but also believes in the importance of expanding the field. This is why we have shifted the focus of our subject from purely object-based to a wider scope, questioning and exploring issues centred on the human condition.


    1 John Berger, To the Wedding, Bloomsbury, London, 2009 [1995], p. 107