Baltic Jewellery News (March 2022) No. 41

Page 90

A RTISTIC INSPIR ATIONS / RUSSI A N JEW ELLERY R EPORT

JEWELRY ART AS A CRYSTALLIZATION OF HUMAN THOUGHTS

B A LT I C J E W E L L E R Y N E W S

41 –2022

● 88

By Olga NIKONOVA

Anna Tereshchenkova is a famous designer, jeweller, watercolourist and master from St. Petersburg who can materialize the most daring artistic ideas that convey the harmony of the world through seemingly simple things. In her works, Anna shows that today all the most interesting things are born at the intersection of different disciplines and trends, the most attractive artistic finds are always a synthesis of technologies, traditions, and worldviews. And even such a conservative industry as jewellery cannot stand aside from these processes. - Anna, as an artist-jeweller you are known for your woodwork, and the GOODWOOD project you have created over the years showing that the possibilities of this material are truly endless. But how do you define the so-called jewellery value of a tree for yourself? - It seems to me that wood is a material created by nature itself for jewellery. Throughout the history of mankind, we have used wood, but we still underestimate its potential, the scope for creativity that wood gives us with its palette of colours, fantastic patterns of textures, with its environmental friendliness and tactility. Woodworking techniques are numerous and have been perfected for thousands of years, we have in our hands a malleable and absolutely flexible material from which you can create anything: the finest carving, voluminous and flat objects, shining glossy and velvety textures. One of the first exhibitions of the GOODWOOD project was held under the motto „Precious woods become jewellery”—by combining wood, metal and stones, we can create true jewellery masterpieces. Wood is a light and at the same time very durable substance, it can serve for a very long time—many wooden artifacts of very venerable age are exhibited in museums around the world. And the noble bog oak is an eternal material! And, finally, I don’t think you need to prove to anyone that wood is the most environmentally friendly material available. Its processing does not require harmful technologies, like many metals and plastics, it does not cause allergies, it is disposed of without harm to the environment. This is a wonderful, renewable resource, and the production of designer jewellery needs so little that even the most ardent environmentalists will not sound the alarm. In addition, artists are usually interested

in so-called completely worthless fragments of wood— scraps of parquet, pieces of plywood, driftwood, twigs found in the brushwood. Sometimes a few strokes are enough to reveal to everyone the beauty that lurked in a piece of wood that lay under our feet. But I prefer a different approach—when you look for and find in wood the ideal material to implement your flexible ideas. Jewellery techniques ennoble wood, elevate it from the level of craft material to a pedestal of material suitable for the crystallization of human thoughts. - Your another specialty is products with enamels. This is such a complex technique that few people dare to work with today. Why does it attract you? - I’m not only a designer and jeweller, but also a watercolourist. I am most interested in working with colours in jewellery as well. And enamels are just very similar to watercolours. Moreover, I love all types of enamel: transparent, opaque, stained glass, cloisonné, guilloche. My favourite is a combination of stone and enamel—you get a miniature picture. But by and large, I don’t care what technology to use. To embody the image that was born in my head, we often come up with some unexpected techniques that have no name. This is exactly what distinguishes author’s things from mass production—a unique author’s technique. For the last year I have been trying to find a way to incorporate watercolours and paper into my jewellery work. It may not be very practical at first glance, but it is certainly a very interesting and expressive material. - Today there is much debate about whether massproduced jewellery can be considered true jewellery rather than costume jewellery, and on what basis designer items made of non-traditional materials can be ranked as works of jewellery art. Where is that line for you? - Jewellery has long been undeservedly a craft, despite the fact that this industry has always had a lot of talented artists, whose magnificent creations we admire to this day! Today it is difficult to imagine, but when in the 1970s my teacher and legendary jeweller Juta Johannesovna Paas-Alexandrova was the first jeweller to enter the Union of Artists, the painters discussed for two hours behind closed doors whether a piece of jewellery could even be considered an artistic thing and a jeweller an artist.

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Articles inside

Petri Jarvinen, Mr gold silver & watchw

4min
pages 104-108

Jacek Baron passed away

4min
pages 102-103

Today Latvian jewellery community is a stronger force

8min
pages 94-97

Jewelry art as a crystallization of human thoughts

5min
pages 90-91

Whay makes a piece of jewelry a masterpiece?

8min
pages 86-89

Legnica jewellery festival silver will take place in May

8min
pages 82-85

Tammi Jewellery

4min
pages 76-77

Lod a fixed star in the Swedish jewellery scene

5min
pages 78-81

Camila Dinesen story

4min
pages 66-67

Masks and new trends

5min
pages 62-65

Guldviva flower worthy of a princess

5min
pages 72-75

New jewelry Russia

2min
pages 44-45

Returning health jewelery markers‘ immune response to the virus

5min
pages 10-11

Amber Trip show is coming back

5min
pages 20-23

Get to know your jeweller

2min
pages 40-43

Be global shop local

3min
pages 30-31

Jewellery an bacteria

5min
pages 8-9

25 years of the IAA

3min
pages 32-35

Batic design stories

6min
pages 36-39

Swedish blue – something new and rare

6min
pages 24-27
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