Deedee Cuddihy talks to curators responsible for the jewellery on
display in our museums about their assets and their aims
NOT surprisingly, given her job, Elizabeth Goring was wearing
jewellery and knew the name of the person who had designed every
discreet, understated piece. She said: ''The brass earrings are by
Debbie Long, the brooch by Clare Vicchi, Holly Belsher made the copper
neck chain, Paul Preston the silver ring and my engagement ring (iron,
gold and tiny garnets) is from Malcolm Appleby of Crathes.'' Apart from
the engagement ring, which is a one-off, all Dr Goring's jewellery was
inexpensive limited production stuff bought, not from High Street stores
or posh shops, but from private galleries and craft exhibitions.
As curator of modern jewellery for the National Museums of Scotland,
Elizabeth Goring has recently been putting the finishing touches to the
refurbished twentieth century jewellery gallery in Edinburgh's Chambers
Street museum. Exhibition space has been almost doubled and visitors can
get much closer to the displays, which date from the Arts and Crafts
Movement of the beginning of this century to the present day.
In the 11 years that Dr Goring has been at Chambers Street, the
contemporary jewellery collection -- now one of the most comprehensive
in Britain -- has grown from around 30 or 40 pieces to many hundreds, a
large portion of that donated by Miss Eileen Crowford, a retired typist
with the former Edinburgh Corporation who apparently spent most of her
spare cash from the 1940s until her death in the late 1980s on junk
jewellery.
As Elizabeth Goring recalls, she and her assistant, Lesley-Anne
Liddiard, didn't know what to expect when they received a lawyer's
letter informing them of the bequest. In the event, it took them two
weeks to sort through the beads, brooches, bracelets and so forth that
were tucked away in a tiny council flat in Oxgangs.
In memory of Miss Crowford (who left detailed accounts of when and
where she made her purchases and how much they cost), Dr Goring has
recently acquired a typical Chanel and pearl necklace dating from the
late 1940s which will go on permanent display in the refurbished
gallery.
''Ours is not a collection of sparkling gems,'' she explains. ''It's
either mass-produced or strictly one off. A lot of twentieth century
jewellery may not be of intrinsic value but is important because it is
so much of its time.
''Generally speaking, I tend to acquire pieces made by established
jewellers; the ones who have prob-
ably taught other jewellers and will chart the direction that
jewellery will take in the twentieth century.''
Although the bulk of the jewellery is British, there are a number of
pieces from the rest of Europe as well as the United States of America
and Japan, where, as Dr Goring explained: ''There hasn't been a
jewellery tradition, so it's interesting to see what they are starting
to make now.''
''We wanted to put Scottish, and British, contemporary jewellery into
a wider context, so what you see here is the best of what's being
produced,'' she said.
''The collection also chronicles the major developments and trends in
modern jewellery design from the time at the turn of the century when
members of the Arts and Crafts Movement sought to revive, in an
industrial age, the ideal of the hand crafted object, to present times
and the creation of jewellery as ''wearable art''.
So the gallery features, among dozens of other pieces, an exquisite
work by the Arts and Crafts artist, Phoebe Traquair (1900-ish); a tiny
mummy case pendant (with tiny mummy inside) from the Wembley exhibition
of 1925, held three years after the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb; a
severe Scandinavian necklace circa 1960, and a table top sculpture from
the 1980s which breaks down into 20 different rings.
One of the gallery's most recent purchases is a necklace from Amer-
ica which has been hand knitted in silver and copper wire and
illustrates a new trend -- the use of textile techniques in jewellery.
Although the American necklace is one that Dr Goring admires, she
points out that the decision to acquire a piece depends not on her
personal preferences but on whether it is important to represent that
particular aspect of jewellery in the national collection.
A PURCHASE that gave the curator particular pleasure is the beautiful
necklace of chunky amethysts and white and green enamelling made by the
Arts and Crafts jewellers Arthur and Georgie Gaskin of Birmingham. Dr
Goring explains: ''Supporters of the suffragette movement wore jewellery
in what became the suffragette colours of purple, green and white. Even
establishments like Mappin and Webb stocked jewellery in the suffragette
colours.
''This particular piece would have been commissioned by a prominent
suffragette and although I've examined photographs of the Pankhursts, in
the hope of finding it on Emmeline, Christabel or Sylvia, I haven't yet
discovered who it belonged to.''
Aberdeen Art Gallery's keeper of applied art, Christine Rew, says that
''outside of the national museums in Edinburgh, we're the only place in
Scotland actively adding to our contemporary jewellery collection.
''Our link with jewellery is historic. In the sixteenth, seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries, Aberdeen was a great silversmithing area.
''We have a historic silverware collection at the art gallery, some of
which is jewellery that includes polished Scottish granite set in silver
mountings from the 1850s and Cairngorm jewellery dating from the late
nineteenth century, when Queen Victoria was often at Balmoral and gave
many jewellers the royal warrant.''
The historic collection also includes superb work by James Cromar
Watt, an Aberdeen architect whose hobby of enamelling in the Arts and
Crafts style became an all-comsuming passion in the 1890 to 1920 period.
''The contemporary jewellery collection,'' says Christine, who has
been with the Art Gallery since 1983, ''is a reflection of what's
happening in Britain with the emphasis on Scotland.''
Since 1987 the gallery has staged a series of public workshops led by
mainly local jewellers using a wide variety of materials, everything
from precious metals to television wires and plaster cast bandaging.
Earlier this year, a group of 20 Aberdeen jewellers, both staff and
recent graduates from Gray's School of Art, where according to Christine
Rew, ''there is a very vibrant group of jewellery makers and a tradition
of jewellery design'' (although the school has now been incorporated
with the Robert Gordon University), were invited to take part in what
turned out to be a superb and popular exhibition.
Now Aberdeen Art Gallery is this month launching the Craft Gallery, a
series of selling exhibitions which will showcase the work of a
different British jeweller or metal worker every month for the next
year.
''We're the only venue this far north where people will be able to see
and buy contemporary jewellery,'' says Christine Rew, ''and we hope the
exhibitions will demonstrate that this kind of jewellery is affordable
and worth acquiring.''
Glasgow has nothing like the range of jewellery that can be found at
the national museums, but like Edinburgh it has had a generous female
benefactor in Mrs Anne Hull Grundy, who in common with her East Coast
counterpart, had a lifelong passion for collecting jewellery and wanted
it to be given its proper place in the history of art.
Unlike Eileen Crowford, however, Mrs Hull Grundy was able to devote
virtually all her time to collecting and had amassed as many as 10,000
antique brooches, rings, pendants, necklaces, earrings, hair ornaments,
buckles, lockets, and bangles before her death in 1984.
A talented, widely respected jewellery historian, Anne Hull Grundy
spent a fortune on her collection of British and continental work, which
dates mainly from 1720 to 1940 and includes precious metals, gem stones,
cut steel, iron, enamel decoration, paste, glass, and carved and tinted
ivory.
Kelvingrove in Glasgow was one of more than 40 museums in Britain to
receive jewellery from Mrs Hull Grundy, who, despite being confined to
bed for the last years of her life, continued to collect and donate
jewellery -- with the help of specialist dealers -- until she died.
Rosemary Watt is the Glasgow museum's art curator with whom Mrs Hull
Grundy liaised -- by telephone -- during the eight-year period in which
she was donating jewellery to the city. Mrs Watt explains: ''She had a
personal connection with Glasgow and was aware that, although we had
some jewellery in our costume and textile collection, we didn't have an
active collecting policy.
''Originally we were offered 150 pieces but ended up with more than
1000, which means we have now a strong historical collection, tracing
the story of jewellery over a 200-year period, that will be added to in
the future.''
Only a fraction of the Hull Grundy gift is on public view upstairs at
the Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, but the display includes some
perfect French earrings, circa 1860, made from pale pink shell, shaped
into tiny shoes with gold heels, bows, and rhinestone decoration; a
miniature Aladdin's lamp brooch from Italy, also circa 1860, and a pair
of English fuchsia drop earrings in gold and tinted ivory, dated 1835.
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