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[2] [9] She taught embroidery and also practised silversmithing and jewellery making. [10] Her complex design patterns, such as the example in the Auckland War Memorial Museum, could have been created for either textile or wallpaper design. [1] Rose married artist Clifford John O'Malley, who was a contemporary at the School of Arts in Christchurch.
In an interview with Susan Cummins for the Art Jewellery Forum, Ann Culy discussed her working process when creating pieces of jewellery, saying, “I do use ancient techniques in my making, they still hold fast. I mix and pour my own ingots. The rings have no solder; they are constructed simply by forging, fusing, filing, burnishing, and stamping.
The company later relocated to Christchurch before in 1898 Linnaeus Partridge moved to Wellington and opened a workshop there. [1] [2] A silver salver from the brand was presented to Queen Elizabeth II on her 1954 Royal Tour. [2] The Cuba Street store was robbed in 1966. [3] Partridge became the first New Zealand stockist of TAG Heur in the ...
Wilkinson has been a practising jeweller for over 20 years and her work explores customary Māori adornment while pushing the boundaries of contemporary New Zealand jewellery practices. [6] She was a lecturer at Unitec Institute of Technology from 1995 to 2008 and a lecturer at Christchurch Polytechnic Institute of Technology from 2008 to 2009 ...
Video interview with Lisa Walker from the Jewellery Conversations series; Video interview with Lisa Walker Arts Foundation of New Zealand, 2015; Keriane Quick, Lisa Walker: Put a cord on it, Art Jewelry Forum, 7 December 2011; Eléna Gee, 'Open Heart: Contemporary New Zealand Jewellery', Lower Hutt: The Dowse Art Museum, November 1993.
The James Pascoe Ltd Group of Companies is a privately owned New Zealand retail group with holdings across New Zealand and Australia.JPG owns and operates chains Pascoes the Jewellers, Stewart Dawsons and Goldmark (all jewellers); department store [6] Farmers (with Goldmark jewellery kiosks in some stores); homeware retailer Stevens; and bookshop Whitcoulls in New Zealand.
Daisy Frances Christina Osborn was born in Christchurch, New Zealand, the only child of Emily Jane Turvey, an Englishwoman, and Alfred Patterson Osborn, an Australian engraver. She attended Christchurch Girls' High School and studied art at Canterbury College School of Art intermittently over fifteen years (1906–11, 1913, 1919–21).
Robinson completed a four-and-a-half-year manufacturing jewellery apprenticeship with Max Wilson in Palmerston North in 1973 and then worked with Roy Evans at Arcade Jewellers in Timaru. [1] From 1978 to 1980, he attended Otago Polytechnic School of Art in Dunedin where he was tutored in painting by Tom Field, Bernard Holman and Walden Tucker ...