Nr. 32020217

Verkauft
Emmy van Leersum - CHP Jewelry Collection - Gijs Bakker Projects - Ring - Broken Lines (size 17)
Höchstgebot
€ 410
Vor 232 Wochen

Emmy van Leersum - CHP Jewelry Collection - Gijs Bakker Projects - Ring - Broken Lines (size 17)

The two-tone gold ring is a remake of a design from 1982 by one of the Dutch pioneers of the ‘New Jewellery’. It is based on a two-dimensional design with straight lines intersecting and breaking each other. Made with white and yellow gold. size 17: L.20 x W.20,5 x H.20 x T.1.5 mm Emmy Van Leersum was born in Hilversum, The Netherlands. She met fellow student, Gijs Bakker, while studying jewellery design in Stockholm. The two became creative partners for over twenty years. Together, they did pioneering work in jewellery design from the 1960s until Van Leersum's untimely death in 1984. She was a hugely influential designer, both in her native country and throughout the world. A retrospective at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam in 1980 reaffirmed her stature as a leader in minimalist jewellery design. Van Leersum was trained at the Gerrit Rieveld Academy between 1958-62; later in 1962 she attended Konstfackskolan, in Stockholm, Sweden. Her first solo exhibition was in 1993, and has been shown most recently in 2014. In describing her work Van Leersum said, "I'm not sure that my work really has that much to do with jewellery. It's more to do with people, with shapes; getting away from simply buying gold. That tradition has never appealed to me. I think you should have a reason for wearing something."

Nr. 32020217

Verkauft
Emmy van Leersum - CHP Jewelry Collection - Gijs Bakker Projects - Ring - Broken Lines (size 17)

Emmy van Leersum - CHP Jewelry Collection - Gijs Bakker Projects - Ring - Broken Lines (size 17)

The two-tone gold ring is a remake of a design from 1982 by one of the Dutch pioneers of the ‘New Jewellery’. It is based on a two-dimensional design with straight lines intersecting and breaking each other. Made with white and yellow gold.

size 17: L.20 x W.20,5 x H.20 x T.1.5 mm

Emmy Van Leersum was born in Hilversum, The Netherlands. She met fellow student, Gijs Bakker, while studying jewellery design in Stockholm. The two became creative partners for over twenty years. Together, they did pioneering work in jewellery design from the 1960s until Van Leersum's untimely death in 1984. She was a hugely influential designer, both in her native country and throughout the world. A retrospective at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam in 1980 reaffirmed her stature as a leader in minimalist jewellery design.
Van Leersum was trained at the Gerrit Rieveld Academy between 1958-62; later in 1962 she attended Konstfackskolan, in Stockholm, Sweden. Her first solo exhibition was in 1993, and has been shown most recently in 2014.
In describing her work Van Leersum said, "I'm not sure that my work really has that much to do with jewellery. It's more to do with people, with shapes; getting away from simply buying gold. That tradition has never appealed to me. I think you should have a reason for wearing something."

Suchalarm einrichten
Richten Sie einen Suchalarm ein, um benachrichtigt zu werden, sobald neue passende Objekte verfügbar sind.

Dieses Objekt wurde vorgestellt in:

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

So kaufen Sie auf Catawiki

Mehr zum Käuferschutz erfahren

      1. Etwas Besonderes entdecken

      Entdecken Sie in unseren Auktionen Tausende von besonderen Objekten, die von Experten ausgewählt wurden. Sehen Sie sich die Fotos, die ausführliche Beschreibung und den Schätzwert der besonderen Objekte an, die Sie interessieren. 

      2. Höchstgebot abgeben

      Finden Sie etwas, das Sie begeistert, und geben Sie das Höchstgebot ab. Sie können die Auktion bis zum Schluss mitverfolgen oder unser System für Sie bieten lassen. Dazu müssen Sie einfach nur den Maximalbetrag eingeben, den Sie für das jeweilige Objekt ausgeben möchten. 

      3. Sichere Zahlung durchführen

      Bezahlen Sie Ihr besonderes Objekt und wir verwahren Ihre Zahlung, bis Ihr Objekt unversehrt bei Ihnen angekommen ist. Wir wickeln alle Transaktionen mit einem zuverlässigen und sicheren Zahlungssystem ab. 

Haben Sie etwas Ähnliches zu verkaufen?

Unabhängig davon, ob Online-Auktionen Neuland für Sie sind oder ob Sie gewerblich verkaufen – wir helfen Ihnen, mehr mit Ihren besonderen Objekten zu verdienen.

Objekt verkaufen