Fresh Perspectives: Exploring the HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace

We hope you’re enjoying our favorite week of the year, NYC Jewelry Week! Here on Future Heirloom, we’re celebrating by bringing you special behind-the-scenes content on some of our favorite programs, events, and exhibitions every day this week. Check in each day for a new feature on the happenings at NYC Jewelry Week.

We’re wrapping up our week-long NYC Jewelry Week content with a special feature to celebrate this year’s HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace. Featuring incredible fine jewelry, budget-friendly fashion jewelry, and innovative contemporary work, there is truly something for everyone: it’s a perfect place to snag your favorite piece in time for the holidays.

Learn more about the theme for this year’s HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace:

“As a champion of extraordinary design and a company dedicated to promoting diversity and inclusion, we at 1stDibs are thrilled to partner with NYC JW for a second year to amplify the work of diverse creators in the HERE WE ARE incubator. 

In the last year and a half, COVID-19 presented a fresh set of challenges for creating and producing new work – circumstances which disproportionately impacted underrepresented makers. We chose the theme of resilience to underscore the myriad hurdles that BIPOC makers faced in producing their latest designs. With the theme of resilience, we hope to start a conversation on finding inspiration in difficult times and spotlighting the “Power of Jewelry” – the core concept that NYC Jewelry Week celebrates this year.”

Nancy Hood, Chief Marketing Officer at 1stDibs

“The pandemic presented unique challenges last year for creating and producing designs. Creators have the opportunity to discuss resilience designing under unprecedented/difficult circumstances as well as staying inspired. Addressing resilience in a space where BIPOC creators are still underrepresented. With Here We Are, they are given a platform to be amplified. NYCJW’s concept this year is the Power of Jewelry and this concept would compliment that sentiment.”

JB Jones, Co-Founder of NYC Jewelry Week on the HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace

To give you a special look at the making of the HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace, we invited select new and returning participants of the HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace to introduce us to their brands and tell us about what this opportunity means to them.
Meet them below:

Sumer Sayan of Harlin Jones:

Harlin Jones was founded by Australian designer, Sumer Sayan. Sumer started his international jewelry internship in Istanbul, Turkey in 1998. There, under the guidance of master jewelers, he was taught the fundamentals of handcrafting jewelry, which in Turkey, are passed down over generations. Over the next 12 months, he worked and studied as a bench jeweler, working with precious metals and gemstones.
After completing his internship in Istanbul, Sumer returned to Sydney where he started a four-year jewelry design apprenticeship. It was during this time that his love and passion for design was born.

Five years into his working career as a fully qualified bench jeweler, Sumer’s itch to create lead him to design and making small collections for himself. Receiving high praise and admiration for the uniqueness, originality, and quality craftsmanship of these pieces, Sumer, at the request of friends started creating pieces for others. The creation of these pieces, along with his travels and personal interests as inspiration helped Sumer in shaping and constantly evolving a style of his own.

The creative freedom and satisfaction experienced making these pieces for friends led Sumer to start his own label, Harlin Jones in 2014. In 2019 an opportunity to move to New York presented itself to Sumer. Sumer made the decision to seize the opportunity and move himself and Harlin Jones there, an easy one. Since then, Sumer has run Harlin Jones from New York, constantly working and evolving, pushing his ideas and creativity, constantly moving Harlin Jones forward.

“Being a part of the HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace is extremely helpful and exciting for someone like myself. To be showcased by NYCJW as a part of the HERE WE ARE initiative gives it that extra bit of excitement and credibility as an up-and-coming designer trying to find its place in the industry.”

Sumer Sayan, Harlin Jones

Dominique Reneé:

Born and raised in Connecticut, but now based in LA,  I grew up in an environment where creativity and individuality were strongly encouraged. At a young age I discovered that I had a love for music and art, and that I wanted to create. After high school I decided to go to college for Graphic Design, but soon after concluded that my heart wasn’t in it. My dreams of being a designer were stifled only by the feeling that I might not have what it took. When my nails started to turn heads everywhere I went, I realized it was time to go for it. What did I have to lose? I started designing my own nails because I couldn’t find salons that were able to do what I wanted done. It is not exactly how I thought I would get started, I just kind of fell into it, but I am passionate about it. Nails, for me, had become my most important accessory when putting an outfit together. We ALL know how important accessories are. With that in mind I decided to acquire my certification in Nail Technology, and to develop my own line of hand painted nails. After premiering my first couple nail collections, I expanded my line to offer other handmade accessories.                     

Although I have chosen a career in design, music still plays a huge part in my life. I carefully curate a playlist for each collection that helps to set the mood, and to communicate my feelings and the message behind each piece.

Dominique Reneé is a sassy exploration of life, love and loss; that is produced from a playlist of emotions. 

“Being accepted into the HERE WE ARE initiative and participating in the HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace has been such a great experience for me! As someone whose story and work is anything but traditional, I can’t even put into words what it means to be recognized in this way.

Selling my pieces via the HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace was so cool! I was a bit apprehensive going into it because I wasn’t sure what the average 1stDibs consumer was like, but when all was said and done, I got my jewelry in front of a brand new audience and I ended up being the top seller!”

Dominique Reneé

Aalia Mujtaba of Metaalia Jewelry:

Aalia Mujtaba is the sole designer and metalsmith behind Metaalia Jewelry. She lives and works in Clarkston, GA, where she shares her life and love of art with her husband and son. Aalia is on the board of the Metal Arts Guild of Georgia, is a member of Society of North American Goldsmiths and the American Craft Council. She has taught metalsmithing at Callanwolde Fine Arts Center in Atlanta for 13 years. Metaalia Jewelry hopes to grow enough to one day relieve her husband from his job.

“The HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace gave my work exposure to a new and discerning audience. Customer interaction facilitated by NYCJW and 1stDibs made the virtual selling experience more human. Among many things, the HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace experience taught me the importance of clear and striking photography in communicating my brand to an online buyer. NYCJW provided great resources to heighten my marketing skills to meet the quality of my work.”

Aalia Mujtaba, Metaalia Jewelry

To explore the HERE WE ARE x 1stDibs Marketplace in full, click here.


Quotes courtesy of Nancy Hood and the 1stDibs PR team; and JB Jones of NYC Jewelry Week. Images, bios, and testimonials courtesy of Sumer Sayan, Dominique Reneé, and Aalia Mujtaba. Feature edited and compiled by Future Heirloom Editor Jackie Andrews.

A Look at Lapel Stories: America’s Political Pins with Rebecca Schena & Talia Spielholz

Welcome to Day 5 of NYC Jewelry Week! Here on Future Heirloom, we’re celebrating by bringing you special behind-the-scenes content on some of our favorite programs, events, and exhibition every day this week. Check in each day for a new feature on the happenings at NYC Jewelry Week.

Today, we’re talking political jewelry with Rebecca Schena and Talia Spielholz, the creators of Lapel Stories: America’s Political Pins, a lecture happening tomorrow. During the lecture, jewelry makers and researchers Talia & Rebecca will discuss the symbolism, utility, and history of political pins and their role in constructing an American political identity.
We spoke with Rebecca and Talia their interests in the political power of jewelry, and how their concept for the lecture took shape:

“The idea for Lapel Stories came from the unexpected convergent evolution of our individual research/making practices and, of course, from ✧・゚friendship゚:*. As researchers and makers of body adornment, we are interested in the sartorial presentations of political power and social identity we make each day. We are constantly intrigued and surprised by how subtle (and sometimes not-so-subtle) acts of adornment can lead to enormous shifts.

In the last few years, political pins have become a topic of increased debate in the United States. Many people, politically inclined or otherwise, use pins to display their opinions on popular and niche issues. With the constant deluge of social media transmissions and the amnesiac churning of the news cycle, political pins and other worn political messages have become increasingly visible. From performative safety pins to pronoun pins to “Black Lives Matter” t-shirts to the assortment of ideological insignias donned on January 6th: what we wear is as political as ever. Yet, coverage of dress and adornment in politics is often discussed in stark, black-and-white terms that consider “style” and “substance” mutually exclusive. As jewelers, who experience style and substance as intimately intertwined, we felt that it may be helpful to speak about how we think about political pins.

As worn objects, pins are a favorite of jewelers because of their ease of wear and their ability to convey billboard-style messaging. However, we thought it was important not to focus solely on art jewelry but to speak to the pin’s utilitarian roots as a readily producible and wearable method of display. From antiquity through the present and in societies worldwide, the desire to share experiences, build communities, and express personal identity through our worn objects has been constant.

We hope that this presentation will reflect the varied purposes of the political pin and its longevity throughout human history. We aim to help jewelry enthusiasts of all stripes place their personal experiences with political pins into their larger historical context.”

Rebecca Schena & Talia Spielholz

Talia Spielholz’s portion of the lecture will contextualize the contemporary political pin in the US within a broader global and historical framework. Using objects, portraits, and cartoons from different eras and cultures as examples, Talia will discuss the American political pin’s evolution from the Civil War era through to the present. She will underline how, through its utilitarian function, ease of wear, and material construction, the pin became an inseparable part of American political dress and democratic identity.

Rebecca Schena will discuss the communicative potential of adornment, with a focus on how political pins encourage discourse, display identity, unify communities, and project a public self-image. Using examples from the political theater, anti-establishment “guerrilla accessorizing” movements, and contemporary jewelry, Rebecca will demonstrate how costuming is used in the political sphere. She will address the role of political pins through the framework of symbolic interactionism and social psychology.

About the Speakers

Rebecca Schena is a Bay Area-based jeweler, writer, and aspiring maximalist. She holds a BFA in jewelry and metalsmithing with a concentration in scientific inquiry from Rhode Island School of Design. Rebecca is interested in jewelry as a method of initiating political discourse and as a way of expressing, manipulating, or distorting social identity. She believes that a healthy dose of humor and blasphemy is necessary to invite us into approaching critical subject matter. In addition to her daily work as a bench jeweler, she is a contributor to Making Progress and Current Obsession Magazine.

Talia Spielholz is a current MA candidate in Costume Studies at NYU Steinhardt. She received her BFA in Jewelry + Metalsmithing from Rhode Island School of Design. Talia’s research focuses on the relationship between dress and power, specifically as it relates to gender. She is interested in how material choices construct identity and mythologies, the overlap between dress and jewelry, and the ability of worn objects to permeate culture, articulate identity, and bridge narratives. She is passionate about educational accessibility and aims to develop approachable jewelry and dress exhibitions.

Lapel Stories: America’s Political Pins with Talia Spielholz & Rebecca Schena will be livestreamed Saturday, November 20, 2021 from 2:30 PM- 3:30 PM. For more information on the virtual talk and to RSVP, click here.

Both Talia Spielholz and Rebecca Schena are members of NYC Jewelry Week’s One For The Future program, dedicated to uplifting recent graduates, self-starters, and emerging professionals who embody passion, dedication, and a commitment to jewelry. Learn more about the One For The Future program here.


Lecture description and quotes attributed to Rebecca Schena & Talia Spielholz. Text, quotes, and images provided by Rebecca Schena. Feature edited and compiled by Future Heirloom Editor Jackie Andrews.

Exploring News From Central Asia with Aida Sulova

Welcome to Day 2 of NYC Jewelry Week! Here on Future Heirloom, we’re celebrating by bringing you special behind-the-scenes content on some of our favorite programs, events, and exhibitions every day this week. Check in each day for a new feature on the happenings at NYC Jewelry Week.

Today we’re revisiting a special feature on the NYC Jewelry Week 21 exhibition, News From Central Asia, curated by Aida Sulova, on view at The Jewelry Library November 15-21, 2021. The works in the exhibition reflect currents in Politics, the Environment, and Culture of the region. Read about the making of the exhibition and Aida’s perspective on the curatorial process below.

Above: Tiaras by Jol Jol, a young Kazakh jewelry brand whose work is based on roads, repeat the shape of seven rivers in Kazakhstan.

News From Central Asia exhibition brings together Central Asian artists, makers, and designers whose inspirational works reflect political protests, climate change, collective memory restoration, jewelry as reminders of historical events, transformation caused by modernization. For New York City Jewelry Week 2021, curator Aida Sulova asked Central Asian artists and designers to share the news from their home country in the form of a wearable object – a jewelry piece.

For many artists in Central Asia making art is the only way to respond and talk about the events taking place today. Although the concept of this exhibition has a geographical representation, the themes of the news are relevant to what we are witnessing in the world. Examples include “Kinematics of Protests,” “Perestroika,” “Wearable Memory Card,” “Women of Kashgar,” “Cotton as a Curse,” says curator Sulova. Central Asia is a region which stretches from the Caspian Sea in the west to China and Mongolia in the east. Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan are former Soviet Republics that comprise Central Asia today. Since its Independence gained after the collapse of the Soviet Union, Central Asian countries have been undergoing a number of major political, social, cultural transformations.

Excerpted from Aida Sulova’s Press Release for News From Central Asia

Aida Sulova’s Curatorial Field Notes for News From Central Asia

I take a deep breath to read the news from Central Asia. News from the motherland worries the most. Born in Kyrgyzstan, former Soviet Republic in Central Asia, I now live in the US. When I call my mother, who lives in Kyrgyzstan, to ask for news, it is never about a new purse that she bought or my relative’s new born baby or anything of that sort, it is always about the politics in the region. 

When I heard that “The Power of Jewelry” was going to be the theme of the New York City Jewelry Week in 2021, I wanted to propose an exhibition that would become a visual and tactile reflection of the news from Central Asia. Through the tapestry of creative visions, artworks, and field notes, I was hoping to portray the complex thinking and challenging statements of makers, designers, and artists from Central Asia. 

The past year was full of cataclysms that made us turn back while looking forward. Who were we, what have we become, and what have we done? Looking at what I am today, I can see my identity formation through a number of major historical events: being born and brought up in the Soviet Union, experiencing Perestroika, collapse of the old regime, life in the newly independent Muslim state, the Tulip Revolution, the April Revolution, and immigration. Now living and witnessing recent political and social upheavals in the US, I thought I’d developed some sort of immunity to the experiences of that kind. But the news kept coming and my reaction to it proved that one will never develop an emotional stability for today’s atrocities. 

After I announced the theme for the “News from Central Asia” show and sent out invitations to selected artists, I packed my stuff and went to Kyrgyzstan. The trip back home in the post-pandemic period was not only about visiting my family, friends, and memories. It was also about connecting with new people, places, and practices. Looking for new codes, symbols, and answers became a central point of the journey. 

I met with all participating artists, both in person and online. We talked about contemporary art and how meaningful and empowering it is when it gets to sending a message into the world. How it can be displayed not only on the walls but also on the body. I told them about The Jewelry Library and its collection of books and jewelry and its projects that unify and inspire a community of makers and storytellers. I am glad that having spent time with artists, after our walks and talks, laughs and tears, I ended up with a collection of art pieces that will be presented at the “News from Central Asia” exhibition in New York.  

How can one tell a story through a wearable object? It turns out that there are many distinctive ways! A jewelry piece called “Kinematic of Protests” is made by an artistic duo, Galina and Evgeny Boikov, who used the real silhouettes of protesters from the Kyrgyz Revolutions of 2005 and 2010 to show that “dynamics of gestures and poses of individuals in extreme situations are identical for all protests and revolutions around the world.” The Tajik artist Diana Rahmanova made a jewelry piece from the household objects that during the Civil War in Tajikistan served as body protection. Two Almaty-based artists restore a forgotten Uighur material culture through costumes, jewelry, folk dances, and stories. Jol Jol, a young Kazakh jewelry brand whose work is based on roads, proposed tiaras that repeat the shape of seven rivers in Kazakhstan, an area that used to be a concentration of life, trade, and culture, but now is drying up.

Saule Dyussenbina’s series of photos of people’s trash turned into sculptural jewelry was made during the Lazy Art residence at Issyk Kul Lake. Altynai Osmoeva uses a shape of a child’s bib to reinforce the Soviet upbringing style filled with male cult jewelry. Turkmen artist Jennet presented unusual wearable embroidered portraits of Turkmen women.

“But how would you trust Aida?” – one artist shared her story about her friends’ concern when she decided to send her mother’s jewelry for the show. “I trust her because trust is what we talk about and I hear what I’ve waited to hear. I’d like to tell the world about the richness of Uighur culture while everybody is busy with politics.” 

“I lost my sleep when I read your concept and after we met in my studio. But that is a good feeling because I feel challenged and inspired,” Jakshylyk Chentemirov, a jeweler from Kyrgyzstan told me. 






Left: Work by Jakshylyk Chentemirov

While I was doing my research on Central Asian jewelry art, I met a scholar Ekaterina Ermakova, who shared her article “From Folk Tradition to Original Jewelry Art,” which states: “In Central Asia, designer jewelry emerged in the 1970-1980s. It replaced traditional folk jewelry. The most important characteristics of this jewelry are the amount of information and freedom of choice. Today, three main stylistic directions have been formed. The first is the traditional school, within which the jewelers copy ancient jewelry using traditional materials. The second is ethnic style, the main task of which is not copying old forms, but creating a recognizable image associated with national culture. Third – contemporary artistic style based on individual perception of the national culture. In avant-garde artworks, the artist freely handles new jewelry art materials using wood, leather, felt, bone, silk.” 

Not all Central Asian artists feel safe and free to share their creative visions today. I’ve met artists who printed their artworks on coffee mugs to show them to the world. And while bringing some artworks for the “News from Central Asia” to the US, I had to go through security control and make a presentation about the artwork that the border officers called “weird looking.” The hardest was to find and ship the work of the artist from Turkmenistan. The borders are closed and locally controlled DHL is the only connecting point. Even while shipping the artworks and through dealing with logistics, customs, and state authorities, one can read the news and feel the temperature of the region. 

News From Central Asia is curated by Aida Sulova and presented by The Jewelry Library for NYC Jewelry Week.
The exhibition is on view November 15-21, 2021, 11am-7pm at The Jewelry Library, 1239 Broadway, Suite 500.

For more on the exhibition and to RSVP, click here. Follow curator Aida Sulova on Instagram @aidasulova. You can find more from The Jewelry Library on their website and Instagram @thejewelrylibrary.


Thanks to Aida Sulova for sharing insight into News From Central Asia with us. Text excerpted from press release and Curatorial Field Notes, both written by Aida Sulova. Images provided by Aida Sulova; image credits belong to the respective artists represented. Feature edited and compiled by Future Heirloom Editor Jackie Andrews.

ART & COMMUNITY 2021 Participants

NYC Jewelry Week 2021 is fast approaching and we are thrilled to announce the participants of this year’s ART and COMMUNITY programs. Answering our open call for unique, innovative and engaging programs around the theme of The Power of Jewelry, these collectives, businesses, collaborators, artists, curators, educators and disruptors represent the pulse of jewelry today.

AdornAxis
Aida Sulova
AJF and The Jewelry Library
Amelia Toelke & Andrea Miller
Anna Nava Handcrafted Jewelry
Anna Rasche & Art Glass Forum
Ariana Embiricos & Mike White
Art Party Central
Baltimore Jewelry Center
Bario Neal
Bette Talvacchia
Brooklyn Metal Works
Charon Kransen Arts
Christianne Teague
Claire Webb & Ashley Nettye Pollack
Commence Jewelry
Current Obsession
Dana Bronfman
Didier Ltd
Divya N
Donna Bilak
Amulet by D

Dream Machine
Eliana Negroni & Nichka Marobin
Emma Gregory
Erica Rosenfeld & Heller Gallery
Galerie Noel Guyomarc’h
Gallery Loupe & The Jewelry Library
Hearts + Flowers
Heidi Lowe Gallery
Hongmei Teng
Isela Robles Jewellery
Kalkidan Hoex
L. A. Pai Gallery
Lauren Darrouzet & Angela Caldwell
leungdesigns
Linked Connection
Luci Jockel & Emily Jockel
Marie Wolf Jewels
Mariko Sumioka
Meghan Patrice Riley
New Paltz Metal

Nuohan Jiang
NYC Jewelry Lab
Oma Jewerly
Paula Finch
Paula Guzmán
Pratt Institute
Rago Wright
Rebecca Hannon & Yash Purohit
Reinstein Ross
Snem Yildirim
Spencer Collection
Stay Gold Collective
Sun & Selene
Talia Spielholz & Rebecca Schena
Tamar Navama & Aya Schein
The Flourish Jewellery Project
The Jewelry Edit
Tina Rath
Twin Elegance
UGA
Urban Glass
Vershali Jain
ZARIG Jewels

Today kicks off our official NYCJW21 WARM UP season. Over the next two months we will share insights, sneak peeks and introductions to the programs created by this group of participants – with more to come! Stay tuned to our Instagram @nycjewelryweek to follow along and look out for more announcements about this year’s NYCJW sponsors, partners, programs and participants.

Head HERE to learn more about NYC Jewelry Week 2021.