David Yurman’s new jewelry is inspired by the most celebrated stained-glass artist

 

 

@David Yurman

“Jewelry and stained glass are united by a mutual and profound dependence upon light” – Brian Clarke.

According to Brian Clarke, jewelry and stained glass historically share a breathless search for meaning through beauty and a desire to make life lustrous and enchanting whenever and wherever they can. Brian Clarke, the British architectural artist, painter and printmaker, is known for his large-scale stained glass and mosaic projects, abstract and symbolist canvases, and collaborations with major figures in Modern and contemporary architecture.

American luxury jeweler David Yurman renews its timeless celebration of relaxed American luxury with a tribute to Brian Clarke—the most celebrated stained-glass artist in the world today. David Yurman’s Fall 2020 campaign captures ease and emotion, bringing the new collections to life on the body. Inspired by the work of Brian Clarke, the Fall campaign injects a collage of color and light by setting David Yurman jewelry against Clarke’s inspirational works.

@David Yurman

While Brian Clarke and David Yurman work with different mediums, they have followed similar paths in their careers. As artists, they strive to elevate their craft into an art form, working to achieve beauty through framing light and color – for Clarke, most notably in stained glass and for Yurman, in jewelry. Both artists have taken a traditional, classical viewpoint in their mediums, and applied modern technologies and innovative methods of integrating unique materials. It is their shared curiosity and attention to detail that unites them, along with their appreciation of the transformation of light as it passes through translucent materials – such as glass and gemstones.

As a family-led design house, there is an inherent continuity running through David Yurman jewelry. The collections featured in this campaign offer a range of signature designs, meaningful motifs, and one-of-a-kind pieces in an array of mixed metals and brightly hued stones. Each piece is designed to be layered together and to express the wearer’s unique style.

Brian Clarke Art; @brianclarke.co.uk

“Brian’s work creates a sense of euphoria… when light illuminates, it transforms darkness into a kaleidoscope of color. His works bring joy and revitalize our world, inspiring a new kind of beauty,” says cofounder and chief designer David Yurman. “Given the current state of the world, his work feels especially meaningful—the human spirit craves beauty and joy, even in the most challenging times.”

The campaign also underscores David Yurman’s title sponsorship of Brian Clarke’s ‘The Art of Light’ exhibition at the Museum of Arts and Design  in New York. In September 2020, Clarke’s exhibition opened to the public, presenting an immersive exhibition of radical stained glass. Animated by changing light and exuberant, saturated colors, his monumental glass screens, together with paintings, compositions in lead and related drawings, will transport audiences to the very frontier of what is possible in this centuries-old medium today.

Brian Clarke: The Art of Light Exhibition; @brianclarke.co.uk/ @madmuseum.org/
@David Yurman
@David Yurman

Capturing the ephemeral so that it doesn’t fade away: Boucheron Contemplation

      With her new High Jewelry collection, Claire Choisne, Creative Director of Maison Boucheron, aimed to seize the intangible by revealing the fleeting beauty of the natural world. Grasp a piece of sky. follow the movement of a cloud. watch a raindrop fall. be mesmerized by a feather’s swirling flight. Contemplate. Boucheron Contemplation … Read more

Anna Hu, the ‘haute’ jewellery maestro of the 21st Century

 

 
by Philippe Mihailovich & Caroline Taylor

 

Paris Haute Couture Fashion Week is also the time for the big Haute Joaillerie talents to present their high creations to the world on the prestigious Place Vendôme – the place to be for the finest jewellery names in the world.

2019 Anna Hu in front of Musée du Louvre, Paris
Anna Hu in front of Musée du Louvre, Paris; @Anna Hu

The Ritz Hotel always hosts many of the world’s leading foreign designers, some just for the fashion week whilst others are present at the Ritz all year round. Anna Hu, the world’s most expensive jewellery artist, does both – a permanent window at The Ritz and a striking showroom exhibition during this unique event.

For connoisseurs of high jewellery, it’s one of those rare chances not only to meet Anna directly but also to enjoy the experience of touching and wearing some of her Million Dollar creations. Of course, it’s all about the stunning contemporary pieces that this ex-cellist has created under the exhilarating influence of classical music rather than her world-record price tags. One can truly feel and almost hear the music by simply looking at the creations, even if only in her books!

Hu is certainly not ‘just another female Asian jewellery artist creating more butterflies with more diamonds and more jadeite’. Considering that this Taiwanese New Yorker’s family name ‘HU’ actually means ‘butterfly’, one can well expect her to produce at least one butterfly collection but whatever she creates is always a few steps ahead and a higher challenge combined with a sophistication beyond what has been done before. Hu seems to well on her way to setting the new standards of high jewellery for the 21st Century, always with a deep meaning attached to each and every creation.

Unlike some master jewellers who have felt compelled to create fake brand stories based on an animal, insect, flower or a love story, Anna is a living legend with a real story, a real passion, a real universe that flows out of her just as a symphony flows out of a great composer. She does not design ballerinas to try to devise a brand symbol for herself or to appeal to those who frequent the opera houses of the world. The ballerinas are there because Anna is there. The music is in her soul and in her blood. It’s part of her life as much as it is part of the lives of ballerinas. They are raised in opera houses and it shows in the delicate dancers that we can almost feel moving, enhanced by a gorgeous mix of coloured stones give endless motion to their tutus – far superior to the stiff mini-statues that one tends to see from the established jewellery houses.

ANNA HU Siren's Aria Ring in Aquamarine-side
ANNA HU Siren’s Aria Ring in Aquamarine-side; @ANNA HU

Hu’s ‘brand universe’ is just as authentic and organic as that of the world’s great master artists and maestro composers. Her universe is herself, her philosophies, her authentic emotions, her genuine love for music and her true artistic talents.

Unlike the houses who employ marketing advisors to ‘position’ their brands or hire ad agencies to develop their brand identities, Anna’s world has developed naturally through her passions. Her work has been appreciated by the best museums, the big jewellery collectors, the leading luxury experts and magazines worldwide and must be making both the marketing and the ‘design directors’ of the big houses weep with envy.

Most of the big brand names in the luxury jewellery sector do not seem to have achieved much since the days gone by when they were acknowledged with great awards and royal clients from a few hundred years ago, whereas at the age of 35, Anna presented her first global exhibition at the Louvre’s Musée des Arts Décoratifs (MAD) in Paris along with her first book aptly entitled, “Symphony of Jewels, Opus 1”. Hu’s sense of colour, structure, form, a mix of stones and movement leaves one wondering what took the museum so long to host her.

One year later she broke two world auction records at Christie’s Magnificent Jewels’ sale in Geneva. First, the world auction sales record for a contemporary jewellery artist – an accolade previously held by JAR (Joel Arthur Rosenthal, also known as the ‘phantom of the Place Vendôme due to his secrecy and avoidance of the public eye). Second, the highest auction price per carat for a Burmese sapphire. She then went on to break the world auction record for a Chinese contemporary jewellery artist with the $2.59 million sale of her Orpheus Jade Ring at the Christie’s Hong Kong “Magnificent Jewels” sale.

At the Ritz, Hu presented her « Silk Road Music Collection » “I have always been so fascinated by the culture from Silk Road, the most ancient route in the world. As I would like this collection to speak to my Chinese roots, I decided to base my new creations on the traditional yet exotic Silk Road music.” The collection includes five pieces of jewels, each delicately crafted in Paris by the most exquisitely skilled artisans.

Among the five creations is the “Dunhuang Pipa Necklace”, with a jaw-dropping 100.02-carat fancy intense yellow diamond, inspired by the beautiful Chinese instrument, pipa as well as the Dunhuang Mogao grottoes. Since Sui-Tang times, the Mogao Grottoes have symbolized the starting point of the Silk Road. This necklace can also be transformed into a brooch and a pair of earrings, offering the wearer more versatility in choosing their jewels.

ANNA HU Jadeite Cello Brooch
ANNA HU Jadeite Cello Brooch; @ANNA HU

As can be heard in the video interview, Anna projects her passion for music onto her creations. To Anna, jewellery designs are like musical creations, and in her works, a song’s melodic beauty can always be felt. Her “Jadeite Cello Brooch” takes inspiration from Picasso’s “Violin Hanging on the Wall”, located in Switzerland’s Museum of Fine Arts Bern (Kunstmuseum Bern).

The “Blue Magpie Brooch” calls on the Jesuit missionary and painter at the imperial court of China – Giuseppe Castiglione for inspiration as well as an antique Blue-and-White Flower-Bird-Motif Circle-Squared Plate from the National Museum of History. Anna used coloured gemstones to translate the two blue magpies and flowers from the forests resulting in a combination of Chinese aesthetics and Western aristocracy.

ANNA HU Ellington Earrings
ANNA HU Ellington Earrings; @ANNA HU

The “Ellington Earrings”, a tribute to Duke Ellington, incorporate piano keys, the shape of harps and the flow of melody. Designed with blue sapphire, baguette-cut and modified cut diamonds, this unique piece glitters on its titanium set. In the middle, conch pearls represent the notes, perfectly interpreting classical jazz in the most elegant style. It is, however, not clear how the creation is linked to the silk road.

Likewise for the lovely “Appassionata Ring in Ruby” – a combination of piano keys and the silhouettes of harps. The classic baguette-cut and modified cut diamonds create the uniqueness of this precious piece combined with rare rubies along with round brilliant cut diamonds glitter on its platinum set. The design perfectly interprets classical jazz. The ring covers three fingers in an elegant way. The emerald cut rubies in the middle embody the black keys on the piano.

ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet 2
ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet II; @ANNA HU

 

Other than the « Silk Road Music Collection », Anna Hu presented nine other recent creations including the “Rachmaninov Bracelet” which is discussed in the video. Each piece individually represents HU’s ongoing enthusiasm for music, culture, and nature, bringing the audience an eye-opening experience in jewellery art.

At the brand’s cocktail reception, Pascal Morand, Executive President of the Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode officially announced Hu as a member of the Paris Haute Couture Committee. Anna Hu is now officially the first Asian female member of the Committee. Her jewellery has been worn by style-influencers and celebrities such as Madonna, Gwyneth Paltrow, Natalie Portman, Scarlett Johansson, Drew Barrymore, Hilary Swank, Oprah Winfrey, the acclaimed contemporary artist Cindy Sherman, and Jetsun Pema, the queen consort of Bhutan.

Hu and her jewels have been featured in The Wall Street Journal, W, ELLE, The New York Times, InStyle, Robb Report, Vanity Fair UK, Vogue Gioiello, Wall Street Journal Europe and leading Chinese publications including South China Morning Post, Harper’s Bazaar, Vogue, ELLE, L’oficiel, InStyle, Marie Claire, and many others.

 

Philippe Mihailovich and Caroline Taylor are luxury brand consultants at HAUTeLUXE and Visiting Professors of Luxury Brand Management at leading business, fashion and jewellery schools in both Paris and China. They are also Paris representatives and contributors to 2luxury2.com.

ANNA HU Siren's Aria Earrings in Aquamarine
ANNA HU Siren’s Aria Earrings in Aquamarine; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet 4
ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet IV @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet 1
ANNA HU Rachmaninov Bracelet I; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Zircon
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Zircon; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Ruby - side
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Ruby; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Ruby - front
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Ruby – front; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Blue Magpie Brooch
ANNA HU Blue Magpie Brooch; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Butterfly Rose Ring in Emerald_side
ANNA HU Butterfly Rose Ring in Emerald_side; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Enchanted Orchid Ring in Blue Sapphire
ANNA HU Enchanted Orchid Ring in Blue Sapphire; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Enchanted Orchid Ring in Jade
ANNA HU Enchanted Orchid Ring in Jade; @Anna Hu
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Rubellite
ANNA HU Le Papillon Ring in Rubellite; @Anna Hu

 

Stone Gauge gets a contemporary makeover for Fred’s 110th Anniversary

  In a nod to the bold creativity of founder Fred Samuel, who was born 110 years ago, Fred high-end jewelry maison has given a contemporary makeover to the Stone Gauge, one of its most emblematic pieces. A replica in gold of one of the jeweler’s most vital tools – a plaque punched with holes … Read more

How to Identify a True Vintage Engagement Ring

  “Vintage” is a very popular wedding theme, from the engagement ring to the bridesmaids’ dresses. But since it’s used so much, there are a lot of knock-offs out there. The seller says your engagement ring is vintage, but how do you know it is? It’s difficult to authenticate a vintage engagement ring, but it … Read more

Inhorgenta Awards 2018. These are the winners of the Inhorgenta Awards 2018

The prize ceremony of the INHORGENTA AWARD is one of the highlights of four eventful fair days.     The Inhorgenta Award 2018 is the „Oscar“ of the jewellery and watch industry and it was awarded in 7 categories for the first time this year. All watch and jewellery brands, designers and manufacturers were eligible … Read more