:The full range of American and European jewelry from The Newark
Museum's extensive decorative arts collection is being brought
together for the first time in the new exhibition titled "Objects
of Desire: 500 Years of Jewelry."
This never-before-seen survey of the jeweler's art currently on
view features more than 200 objects, encompassing a wide variety
of styles and materials used from the Fifteenth Century to the
present day. Visitors can view these masterpieces through
February 18.
The exhibition explores the myriad meanings of jewelry and the
ways in which people wear it to express themselves - affection,
honor, faith, mourning, affiliation, as well as status can be
conveyed.
The meanings are examined through a dozen thematic sections:
Faith and Fashion; Watches - the Value of Time; Commemoration and
Remembrance; Cameos, a Window to Antiquity; Mourning; Souvenirs;
Hair and Head; Accessories; Bracelets; Necklaces; Men's Jewelry;
Jewelry as Fashion; and Jewelry as Art.
Highlights from "Objects of Desire" include Seventeenth Century
silver crosses belonging to the imperial family of Tsar Nicholas
II of Russia; a one-of-a-kind minaudiere created for heiress
Doris Duke by New York jeweler Fulco di Verdura; a striking
silver and labradorite necklace made by Georg Jensen.
Brooch and pendant, Louis Comfort Tiffany & Co., circa
1918, black opals, gold, enamel. Purchase 2005 Helen McMahon
Brady Cutting Fund.
Other standouts include an amethyst pendant made in 1890 by
Charlotte Newman, who was the first woman master jeweler in
England's traditionally all-male jewelry industry, and an
extraordinary brooch of enormous Australian black opals designed by
Louis Comfort Tiffany for Tiffany & Co in the 1910s.
A number of the pieces of jewelry in this exhibition were made in
Newark, where 90 percent of American gold jewelry was produced
for more than a century. From the 1860s to the 1950s, Newark
produced fine jewelry for all of the luxury retailers in America,
including Tiffany and Cartier.
In conjunction with "Objects of Desire," there will be a daylong
symposium on July 10, from 10:30 am until 4 pm, about America's
passion for jewelry and the jewelers who make it.
In addition to Ulysses Grant Dietz, the museum's curator of
decorative arts, the guest speakers are Janet Zapata, a jewelry
historian and independent curator; Yvonne Markowitz, curator of
Egyptian art, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; and Jeannine Falino,
independent curator, former curator of decorative arts, Museum of
Fine Arts, Boston. Co-sponsored by the Society of Jewelry
Historians, the sessions are priced at $45 for the entire day
($35 for members) or $25 for a morning or afternoon sessions.
For information, 973-596-6550 or www.newarkmuseum.org.