See

Style

13 June 2016

“Desk”, a photo series by Iris, Émeraude and Clémence

Clémence Cahu came up with the idea of the twelve jewels presented by Émeraude Nicolas-Berton and photographed by Iris Velghe. Especially for the french jewelry post.

 

Clémence Cahu, stylist

It is a graphic composition where everything becomes abstract. A book, a plastic bag, newspaper. The story revolves around a personality. A man or a woman. Androgynous and literary. Never bourgeois. The jewelry pieces are sculptures that are not necessarily identified at first glance. They come in pairs, the largest is seen from afar the smallest in close up. No matter whether they are scratched or damaged. The setting also is never touched up as I prefer the realistic quality.

 

Iris Velghe, photographer

Nothing is really rational. This is a subject that inspires a framing, a light … The jewelry piece is not treated like the star, but as an object that is part of a daily newspaper and a universe. I’ve just made a daring series for Hermès that is not descriptive. A rare freedom in this very standardized world. We don’t dare to go too far … It’s like improvising; Clémence and Émeraude both brought a more rock twist.

 

Émeraude Nicolas-Berton, artistic director

I wanted a minimalist office feel. A weird, stylized classical composition. Masculine or feminine, whatever. The jewelry pieces are very present but haven’t been touched and are not overly set, to keep the graphic effect. I love the jewelry pieces because they react to light and they produce reflections. One that stands out in this series is the Tiffany & Co. bracelet.

Most popular articles

Facial sculptures: extending the field of jewelry

Jewel? Facial sculptures? Mask? Fashion accessory? Wearable or not? For these creatives, these questions are irrelevant.

5 avant-garde jewels to treat yourself when you love Japan

Made from non-precious materials and with no reference to the past, these 5 avant-garde jewels are a space where designers Fumiki Taguchi, Shinji Nakaba,...

Highlights of Haute Joaillerie - Paris, June 2024

CAD (Computer-Aided Creation) : a subject that is still taboo in this sector, associated with hand-crafted work by artisans heir to a long tradition.

In Tokyo with Tomohiro Sadakiyo from the Hum brand

The Japanese aspect of Hum lies rather in the work on metal colors and textures. And its philosophy.

René Boivin and the mystery of the "Torque" bracelet

Thomas Torroni-Levene set out to recreate the Torque bracelet under conditions absolutely identical to those of the past.

In Japan, in the workshop of Shinji Nakaba

In 2023, the Loewe Foundation Craft prize brought Shinji Nakaba into the spotlight, but this self-taught jewelry designer had in fact been creating jewelry...