Statecraft: Selections from the Jewelry Collection of the Danish Arts Foundation

On View
March 15, 2019 –
June 23, 2019
Location
In Asher Gallery

HCCC Members’ Preview & Tour with Janne K. Hansen
March 14, 5:30 – 7:00 PM

This spring, Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (HCCC) is pleased to host a collection of exquisite contemporary art jewelry, assembled for the first time in the United States, from the Danish Arts Foundation. On view March 15 – June 23, 2019, in the Asher Gallery, Statecraft will showcase more than 80 important pieces of contemporary jewelry that the Foundation’s Craft and Design Committee has acquired directly from the country’s most innovative and prominent designers and artists over the last five decades.

Featuring a wide variety of trends—everything from the late-1970s emphasis on fine silversmithing to the riot of new materials, forms, and concepts of the 1990s through today—the collection provides an irreplaceable opportunity to trace the evolution of contemporary Danish jewelry design. Many of the featured works represent examples of singular Danish artists at different moments in their careers, which, in some instances, span more than 40 years of sustained output in jewelry.

The Foundation supports the livelihood of practicing artists and, for the Danish people, preserves an important part of their cultural legacy. Since 2007, a majority of pieces in the collection have been made available for Danish citizens—who participate in official, special, or public events—to borrow and wear for those occasions. The lending program provides everyday Danes the chance to see, appreciate, and understand, through the opportunity to wear, the best of Danish jewelry design.

HCCC Executive Director Perry Price commented, “HCCC is thrilled to be the first institution in the United States to host this selection of jewelry from the collection of the Danish Arts Foundation. The Foundation’s commitment to supporting practicing artists is to be celebrated, of course, but most remarkable is their willingness to place important pieces of contemporary jewelry into the hands of its citizens. It fulfills the mission of collecting art for the public good—and of connecting, educating, and investing the public with the work of their artist compatriots.”

Statecraft: Selections from the Jewelry Collection of the Danish Arts Foundation is supported by the Danish Arts Foundation and is the first in a series of partnership programs between the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft and Denmark’s Danish Arts in Houston program, a joint venture between the Ministry of Culture and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Please note:  Asher Gallery will close in-store retail sales and serve as an exhibition space during this time period.

 

Image credits:

  1. Annette Dam, “Environmental Genes,” 2012. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives.
  2. Helle Løvig Esperson, “Armsmykke,” 1998. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives.
  3. Karen Ihle, “Armring No. 4,” 1994. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives.
  4. Ulrik Jungersen, “Broche,” 1992. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives.
  5.  Annette Kraen, “Armring,” 1990. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives. 
  6. Gerda and Nicolai Monies, “Halskaede,” 2006. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives.
  7.  Pernille Mouritzen, “Flora Oblitus,” 2017.  Photo by Dorte Krogh.
  8. Peder Musse, “Halskrave,” 1998. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives.
  9. Mikala Naur, “Feather,” 1983. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives
  10. Camilla Prasch, “Fangarm Rot 1/10,” 2003. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives.
  11. Per Suntum, “Ring 21,” 1994. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives.
  12. Ingomar Vangsgaard, “Armring Oval,” 1983. Photo courtesy the Danish Arts Foundation Archives.

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft galleries are dedicated to interpreting and exhibiting craft in all media and making practices. Artists on view can range from locally emerging to internationally renowned and our curatorial work surveys traditional and experimental approaches to materials.

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft galleries are dedicated to interpreting and exhibiting craft in all media and making practices. Artists on view can range from locally emerging to internationally renowned and our curatorial work surveys traditional and experimental approaches to materials.

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