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Anika Smulovitz
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breathe
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Anika Smulovitz
Portfolio
Social Action
breathe
Burden
Loss of Innocence
body in motion
Keys
Meditation: a collaborative project
Gestation
White Collar
Wedding Doves
Lips
Chocolate
Herbarium Specimen Rings
Judaica
Shop
News
Publications
Classroom Demos
About/Contact
Folder: Portfolio
Judaica
Shop
News
Publications
Classroom Demos
About/Contact
Back
Social Action
breathe
Burden
Loss of Innocence
body in motion
Keys
Meditation: a collaborative project
Gestation
White Collar
Wedding Doves
Lips
Chocolate
Herbarium Specimen Rings
Shop body in motion: play (ring 2)
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SmulovitzHingedRing2.jpeg Image 1 of 3
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body in motion: play (ring 2)

$360.00

ring
sterling silver, garnet
2 1/2" x 1/2" x 3/4"; ring size 8
2008

______________________
As an artist working with adornment, I am particularly interested in the relationship between object and wearer. In my jewelry I explore the creation of self-awareness and the formation of intimate physical understandings of the body.

The first pieces in this series engage the visual problem of capturing movement in a static object. By referencing artistic depictions of the body in motion from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, I attempt to think through the relationship between the study of movement and the study of time. References in this series focus on the photographic research of Etienne-Jules Marey and Eadweard Muybridge, and the artwork of the Italian Futurist and contemporary jewelry artists such as Joan Parcher and Rachelle Thiewes.

The body in motion: gravity pendants and brooches move beyond my initial attempt to depict movement in a static object, engaging the wearer as an active participant through sensory experience. This line of exploration records not only the movement of the body, but also becomes an intimate and personal interaction between the wearer and the object.

The rings in the body in motion: play series accentuate the movement of the hand, creating self-awareness through play.

body in motion: tracers pushes this series further by visualizing the trajectory of the movements we make with the jewelry we wear. The constant alignment of the bracelet or ring with the wearer's every move engages the wearer as an active participant.

Add To Cart

ring
sterling silver, garnet
2 1/2" x 1/2" x 3/4"; ring size 8
2008

______________________
As an artist working with adornment, I am particularly interested in the relationship between object and wearer. In my jewelry I explore the creation of self-awareness and the formation of intimate physical understandings of the body.

The first pieces in this series engage the visual problem of capturing movement in a static object. By referencing artistic depictions of the body in motion from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, I attempt to think through the relationship between the study of movement and the study of time. References in this series focus on the photographic research of Etienne-Jules Marey and Eadweard Muybridge, and the artwork of the Italian Futurist and contemporary jewelry artists such as Joan Parcher and Rachelle Thiewes.

The body in motion: gravity pendants and brooches move beyond my initial attempt to depict movement in a static object, engaging the wearer as an active participant through sensory experience. This line of exploration records not only the movement of the body, but also becomes an intimate and personal interaction between the wearer and the object.

The rings in the body in motion: play series accentuate the movement of the hand, creating self-awareness through play.

body in motion: tracers pushes this series further by visualizing the trajectory of the movements we make with the jewelry we wear. The constant alignment of the bracelet or ring with the wearer's every move engages the wearer as an active participant.

ring
sterling silver, garnet
2 1/2" x 1/2" x 3/4"; ring size 8
2008

______________________
As an artist working with adornment, I am particularly interested in the relationship between object and wearer. In my jewelry I explore the creation of self-awareness and the formation of intimate physical understandings of the body.

The first pieces in this series engage the visual problem of capturing movement in a static object. By referencing artistic depictions of the body in motion from the late 19th and early 20th centuries, I attempt to think through the relationship between the study of movement and the study of time. References in this series focus on the photographic research of Etienne-Jules Marey and Eadweard Muybridge, and the artwork of the Italian Futurist and contemporary jewelry artists such as Joan Parcher and Rachelle Thiewes.

The body in motion: gravity pendants and brooches move beyond my initial attempt to depict movement in a static object, engaging the wearer as an active participant through sensory experience. This line of exploration records not only the movement of the body, but also becomes an intimate and personal interaction between the wearer and the object.

The rings in the body in motion: play series accentuate the movement of the hand, creating self-awareness through play.

body in motion: tracers pushes this series further by visualizing the trajectory of the movements we make with the jewelry we wear. The constant alignment of the bracelet or ring with the wearer's every move engages the wearer as an active participant.

Anika Smulovitz

anikasmulovitz@gmail.com

Boise, Idaho

SmulovitzHingedRing2.jpeg
Smulovitzhinged2b.jpg
SmulovitzHingedRing2.jpg