Designer Desire: Guy Vidal

Montage of Guy Vidal jewellery and metalware designs

Guy Vidal (b. 1938) is a French Canadian multi-disciplinary artist & designer. His current practice is in paper however, it’s his vintage jewellery that we’ll be featuring in this week’s Designer Desire.

When we first saw his work, we thought he would hail from Scandinavia. His mid-century pieces are modernist and brutalist – created using pewter, brass and silver and gold plate – and remind us of makers such as Jacob Hull and Jorma Laine.

Vidal explains the development of his practice.

I started with printmaking (etchings and lithographs) where paper, copper and stone appealed to me as much as the finished product. I then favored metal (copper, pewter, silver and gold) with jewelry and sculpture. My research at this time was aimed at the solid construction of volume and the aesthetics of the finished product. Later, I worked with cold glass, that is to say etched with a sandblastr. Another monochrome material offering many possibilities, given its transparency. Through this crystalline material, I saw my imprint in the finished work. I was evolving, without realizing it, towards my current approach.

He was very prolific during his jewellery making career, so examples often come up for sale on both Etsy and eBay.

Portrait of Guy Vidalcredit

Additional image credits:
Live Auctioneers

A guardian angel to watch over you

guardian angel bracelet from AngEli Jewellery

Wow, what a month it’s been… for us, for you, for the entire world! Some days – with the images of deserted towns and empty streets, it feels as if we’re in the midst of an apocalypse movie.

What many of us need right now is a guardian angel to watch over us – helping us through these uncertain times. Well, we have a guardian angel bracelet (worth £49.95) to give to one of our readers courtesy of AngEli Jewellery.

AngEli creates unique Angel jewellery, handmade by Elisabetta Lupano, an Italian Angel Medium. Pieces are created with Swarovski crystals; each item individually charged with powerful angel energies and vibrations.

Elisabetta gains inspiration for the myriad of Angel designs through her dreams, and she loves helping to give people the opportunity to experience the vibration of their chosen Angel through her exquisite jewellery.

To be in with a chance of winning the guardian angel bracelet, share with us how you’re getting through the Covid-19 lock-down. Us, we’ve been spending lots of time doing DIY and gardening in the lovely weather.

A guardian angel bracelet from AngEli Jewellery

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Designer Desire: Margaret de Patta

Montage of jewellery designs by Margaret de Patta | H is for Home

I have to credit Justin with sourcing today’s designer – perhaps he was doing a bit of online research to find me an early birthday present! Anyway, Margaret de Patta (1903–1964) was an American jewellery designer and is this week’s featured creator.

She initially trained as a painter and sculptor however, when she couldn’t find a wedding ring that she liked, she designed her own! Her aesthetic became heavily influenced by the Bauhaus Movement; in 1941 she studied under László Moholy-Nagy at the School of Design in Chicago, Illinois.

Margaret de Patta worked a lot in sterling silver; creating rings, earrings, brooches and pendants using semi-precious materials such as moss agate, rutilated quartz, onyx, amber and ebony. They’ve been described as wearable art – and I don’t disagree!

I could only source three examples of De Patta’s work currently for sale. A few copies of the accompanying catalogue to the 2012, Space Light Structure: The Jewelry of Margaret De Patta exhibition, is available on Amazon. Oakland Museum of California houses the largest collection of her work.

Her papers are held at the Archives of American Art at the Smithsonian Institution. They were donated in two instalments in 2003 and 2015 by Martha Bielawski, the second wife of Margaret De Patta’s second husband, Eugene Bielawski. Her archive includes correspondence, writings, teaching files, exhibition files, personal business records, printed material, artwork & sketchbooks and photographs.

Portrait of Margaret de Pattacredit

Additional image credits:

Art Jewelery Forum | Wallpaper

Designer Desire: Unn Tangerud

Montage of jewellery designs by Unn Tangerud | H is for Home

I’ve received, as a Christmas present from Justin this year, another beautiful specimen to add to my Scandinavian jewellery collection. It’s entitled, ‘Snow Crystal’, and was designed by Unn Tangerud. It can be seen (second row, on the right) in the montage of images above.

Unn Tangerud (b. 1933) spent many years working for Uni David-Andersen, the 4th generation of the David-Andersen jewellery-making family. It was in 1964, while she was working for David-Andersen, that she designed Snow Crystal part of the company’s Troll Series. Also in this series, she designed Unn’s Sun Chariot (second row from the bottom, both left & right).

She worked primarily in silver and bronze using semi-precious stones such as tiger’s eye, amazonite and mylonite. The beautiful mottled pink cabochon stone in my pendant is thulite. The stone was first discovered in 1820 in Sauland, a village in Telemark, Norway. It’s only found in a handful of other locations in the world.

There are a few examples of her jewellery for sale online; check Etsy and eBay.

Image credits:

Bukowskis | Worthpoint