LAPIDARY JOURNAL, September 1992
Transcription
LAPIDARY JOURNAL, September 1992
LAPIDARY GE/VIS • JEWELRY ARTS • /VIIMERALS • THE EARTH •••••^^•••^•^•••••HAmVHBHM SEPTEMBER 1992 $3.00 for GE/Vl CUTTERS - COLLECTORS - JEWELERS Lapidary and metalwork, husband and wife, Aleut and southwestern — all these come together in jewelry that is complex and meaningful. BY FRAN WHITE Upon seeing Denise Wallace's jewelry for the first time, the viewer overlooks the details that have been meticulously combined to make each piece. A second, more studied look at any one of Wallace's hand-fabricated designs, however, not only alerts you to the intricate layers of symbolism and craftsmanship in her work, but also to the exquisite lapidary contributions of Sam Wallace. Some 15 years ago, as newly weds and rank novices in both lapidary and metalwork, Sam and Denise Wallace began taking jewelry making classes and working together. Today, their individual talents are flourishing, yet the two complement each other as they create stunning pieces of jewelry that reflect the symbols of Denise's Aleut heritage. "When Denise began concentrating on her Alaskan designs," Sam admits with good-natured resignation, "it became painfully clear that her designs were far better than mine!" A division of labor naturally ensued, with Denise concentrating on design and Sam taking care of the stonework. "It has been six or seven years now since I have held a torch or Denise a stone," Sam says. v ; Layered 26 with LAPIDARY JOURNAL, September 1992 DENISE DOES NOT CUT the stones, but they are essential to her work. She realizes that the stones may not have been a part of her work had she come to her profession without Sam. His love of lapidary has influenced the course of her design, she acknowledges. Pressed to imagine her work without his influence, she thinks that she probably would have used other techniques, such as more silverwork or scrimshaw, for example, instead of relying on her husband's beautiful work with stones. Sam credits Denise and her designs for his ability to be creative: "Lapidary is far more interesting to me now. I am not doing the same shapes over and over again. With Denise it is always something new, improvising and learning new things. In fact, we like to say that if there is a harder way to do something, we'll find it!" BELOW: The 18 figures that make up the Women and Children belt are made from sterling silver, 18 karat gold, fossilized walrus tusk, and colored stones — lapis lazuli, chrysocolla-in-quartz, sugilite, chrysoprase, variscite, rhodochrosite, turquoise, Bruneau jasper, lace agate, fossil coral, charoite, and spectrolite. OPPOSITE PAGE, LEFT: The Wallaces used sterling silver, 14 karat gold, lapis, variscite, and fossilized walrus tusk for their Koniag Bird Mask; its removable face may be worn as a pendant. RIGHT: Wolf Transformation features sterling silver, fossilized walrus tusk, abalone, and lepidolite. It is one of 10 pieces from the Transformation Belt. nificance Photos by Mark Nohl Layered... Sam Wallace was born in Virginia layers for warmth and ceremony. WalAlaska and there are no native Alaskan and describes his young self as a kid lace has combined these stories and jewelers. As Denise began to incorwith a pocket full of rocks all the time. traditions with the southwestern porate designs influenced by her culture But he was not a passionate collector metalsmithing techniques she has and focused on silverwork, Sam, largely until he and Denise met about 16 years learned in Santa Fe. She sees similarities, self-taught, gravitated toward lapidary, ago in Seattle. Taking a leave-of-absence not differences, between the cultures of which turned out to be his real love. from-his job as an electronics technician, the southwest and her own heritage — "Because her designs have been so Sam joined Denise to travel in the west similarities of kinship with nature and popular, we have been snowed under by van for nine months. with animals and living close to the for years," Sam says. "I would like to do The couple wanted to pursue a land. more carving and faceting. Denise's suchobby together, so they read books Aleut folklore has a recurring theme cess has kept me busy in one direction, about gem locations and began collectof the transformation of forms, captured yet it's okay with me; I really love what ing stones for fun, mostly jaspers I'm doing." and agates in Washington, Oregon, A Wallace signature is a variaand Idaho. They also collected some tion on the intricate southwestern azurite and malachite in Arizona concho belt with themes drawn and New Mexico. They accumufrom native Alaskan folklore and lated so much material that it was lifestyles. One of the first attempts necessary to stockpile it in a storage by the Wallaces was a belt of killer van in Boise, Idaho. Sam Wallace whales, featuring 10 sterling silver still has a good collection of Biggs swimming orcas inlaid with lapis, and Bruneau jaspers. agate, and jasper. Each whale After returning to Seattle and opened to reveal a scene of Alaskan marrying, the couple decided to life, etched on silver. The belt won take metalsmithing and lapidary three awards in the 1984 Indian classes to put some of their collecMarket, an annual exhibit of Native tion to use. Shortly afterwards, in American art in Santa Fe. 1977, the Wallaces moved to Santa Since then, the Wallaces have Fe, where they still live and work. averaged two belts every three Denise, who was developing a years. The first belt was created as strong interest in her Aleut heritage, a single work, but successive belts enrolled at the Institute of American have featured linked pieces that Indian Art there. The couple began detach to be worn separately. to design contemporary jewelry, using their agates and jaspers, inAT THE CROSSROADS. One stead of the more traditional turof the couple's most ambitious quoise and coral of southwestern projects, consuming most of 1990, jewelry. was the Crossroads of Continents "My carving is a way of carrying belt, inspired by the Crossroads of on my culture," Denise says. "My Continents exhibition, co-sponjewelry is a way of saying, 'This is sored by the Smithsonian Instituwho I am. This is where I'm from.'" One of 10 figures from the Crossroads of Continents belt, "Even" tion and the Institute of EthnogThe Aleuts, one of Alaska's regional is fashioned from sterling silver, 14 karat gold, lapis, coral, and raphy of the Soviet Academy of fossilized walrus tusk. The garment opens to reveal inlay work. tribes, have inhabited the Aleutian Sciences in the former Soviet Islands down to the southern coast of in Denise Wallace's designs by hinged Union. After seeing the exhibit, which Washington. openings that reveal surprises, by documents 10 ethnic groups in Alaska, stories within stories, faces behind Siberia, British Columbia, and the TRANSFORMATIONS. Daughter masks, a woman behind the moon, a Yukon Territory, Denise Wallace of a German father and Aleut mother, man turned into a wolf. Until 1983, decided to use a concho belt to portray Wallace was raised in Seattle but spent when Wallace decided to focus on her these same peoples, with the figures patsummers with relatives in Cordova on culture, her designs had a contemterned after garments exhibited in the Prince William Sound. Her jewelry porary, Scandinavian feeling. She finds show. She fashioned a set of 10 pendesigns tell stories — stories her inspiration by studying designs on old dants. Openings on the figures reveal grandmother told her about cold and scrimshaw, reading books on native art scrimshaw drawings or lapidary work faraway places with abundant seals, and artifacts, and returning as often as or another pin or earrings to be removed walruses, whales, ravens, bears, and she can to Cordova to pick berries, fish, and worn. The belt required 2,500 maneagles; places whose natives hunted and and visit her relatives. hours of work and is displayed in their fished and dressed in costumes of many There is no tradition of metalwork in studio. Sam Wallace remembers that "it LAPIDARY JOURNAL, September 1992 laces have a tray of stones to look at and The Wallaces intend the belts to be was the most complicated thing I've worn. Some customers wear them a arrange in patterns. One of Sam's ever done. I think Denise and I went two couple of times a year, housing them in favorite stones is spectrolite, though the to three days without speaking." iridescent gem challenges him. Denise's safety deposit boxes the rest of the time. Contrary to most jewelers, who may A buyer from Scottsdale, Arizona, built affinity for triangular shapes do not suit design a piece around a cut stone, Sam the brittle stone, as it is easy to chip off a display case in his home for his belt. Wallace works with predesigned bezels points when working with spectrolite. While the finished product draws sighs and shapes stones to fit them. Denise Yet Sam has had the skill and patience of admiration from viewers, Wallace hands him a set of connected bezels to make it work because he loves it. He says that for a while he can see only resembling a giant cookie cutter or the pieces of stone — it takes time for him to is partial to stones with bright solid outlines of a child's stained glass kit. colors like chrysoprase, lapis, The Even figure from the and sugilite. Because his Crossroads belt presented him stones are inlaid, translucence with particular challenges. The is not an important factor. Even people from eastern Denise Wallace's designs Siberia wore their jackets open also have an affinity for fossilto display the rich detail of their ized walrus tusks with their clothing. This piece features shadings of browns and lapidary work to simulate the beiges and marbling and texintricate embroidery of the tural effects. Denise, because original costume. "The piece of her heritage, is entitled to drove me crazy," Sam recalls. use new ivory, which is He first carved the face from uniformly white and therefossilized walrus tusk, adding fore preferable from an artisscrimshaw details. Coral, lapis, tic standpoint. But because and ivory were inlaid to they care for the environment, resemble the embroidery of the the Wallaces have decided not original ceremonial costume. to incorporate new ivory in Sam laminated slabs of ivory their work. and lapis so that he could treat them as one piece, after which ANCIENT MASK. One of they were cut, fitted into the Sam and Denise Wallace's bezel, and domed. The sleeves most recent pieces is a replicaand bottom border of the tunic tion of a Koniag wooden feature scrimshaw details. The Sterling silver and fossilized walrus rusk are featured in these Half Crossroads belt was completed Man/Half Walrus Transformation pin/pendants. The silver mask on the ceremonial mask found on at 1 a.m. one morning and at upright figure lifts to reveal an ivory face. The large face on the oval piece Kodiak Island in the 1850s. may be removed and worn as a pendant. They had seen the original in 9 a.m. it was on a plane bound appreciate the whole. the Crossroads exhibit. The Wallaces for New York's American Museum of Denise Wallace puts her designs on made the piece in an edition of eight, Natural History. It is loaned out from paper, then she sits down with Sam to which has already sold out. The first two time to time for shows but was such an discuss them. Sometimes her designs featured fossilized walrus tusk faces investment of labor and love that it will are based on artifacts such as costumes with details added in scrimshaw. For the remain permanently in Santa Fe. or masks, allowing less flexibility of remaining six, they decided to use inlay, BACK TO THE GRIND. There is a color and choice of representational each piece featuring 31 pieces of stones. Other times, she stylizes a tradilapidary work. backlog of orders for Wallace belts, tional form, allowing more creativity which are purchased, sight unseen, with Eleven discs of fossilized walrus tusk with color. In that case, Sam is responinlaid with variscite presented no real asking prices starting at $30,000. sible for determining what stones will be problems. The face, however, was more According to Sam, there has been used and where scrimshaw details will complicated. It featured inlay details of only one occasion when a customer did be added. lapis and variscite. not accept a completed belt. After the oil Denise does all the silverwork, Denise began by fashioning the intespill in Alaska, the Wallaces decided to solders bezels, and fashions the tiny rior bezels Vi", thicker than normal, and pay tribute to the beleagured wildlife by hinges. Sam cuts and shapes the stones traced each one on cardboard for a patcreating a belt with a series of sea otter to fit perfectly, relying on his Titan six tern for Sam. The bezels then were figures. The woman next on the list of wheel diamond cutter/grinder and orders preferred a belt with human soldered into place. Sam used the outflexible shaft. If he says, "I don't think I figures. No problem — the man followside pattern line to trace the shape onto stone. After shellacking the stone, he ing her on the list was glad to have the can do it," Denise ignores him, he says. As they talk about a design, the Walground to the line, completing each inspired creation. Layered... Sam Wallace, the lapidary half of this jewelry making team, prepares stones for setting. piece to fit exactly into the required bezel. All the pieces were epoxied in place and domed. After carving the face, Sam polished the piece and added scrimshaw details. Both Wallaces do scrimshaw on the jewelry, but their techniques are quite different. Denise's work is traditional, using black ink and lines, but Sam is in the process of developing a scrimshaw technique using tiny point work instead of lines to create almost photolike images. Areas are shaded, which gives a more realistic look. Sam is making tools and experimenting with colored inks from London. The Wallace studio employs seven additional people. Six had never made ONE IN Full Selection of Beads Full Line of Shapes CATALOG AVAILABLE PLEASE WRITE WITH RESALE NUMBER: 16 W. 32nd St., 7th Floor New York, NY 10001 (212)563-4990 (800)999-0478 Fax:(212)563-0099 30 Whereabouts At the Wallace's Santa Fe studio, the gallery area regularly displays crafts by other Alaskan native artists. Also, each August, Sam and Denise Wallace sponsor a show of Alaskan native art at the studio, which is located at 815 Early Street, Suite A, in Santa Fe and is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday. The mailing address is P.O. Box 5521, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87502; telephone 505-9840265. The Wallace studio creates two lines of jewelry. One line, available in about 40 galleries and museum shops around the country, has some of its components cast outside the studio. These pieces are combined with hand-fabricated details in silver, gold, and colored stones added by the Wallaces and their assistants. Only the Santa Fe studio features Denise Wallace's handfabricated line of belts and pin/pendants. Galleries with good selections of Wallace jewelry include Adobe East in Summit, New Jersey; Artique, Ltd., Anchorage, Alaska; Earth Spirits of Palm Desert, California; Gallery 10 in Scottsdale, Arizona; Illumina in Atlanta, Georgia; Washington, D.C.'s Indian Craft Shop at the Department of the Interior; The Legacy in Seattle, Washington; Long Ago and Far Away in the Green Mountain Village Shops, Manchester Center, Vermont; North Moon, Telluride, Colorado; Santa Fe Ambiance, Boulder, Colorado; Sagebrush Gallery, Sanibel, Florida; Southwest Museum Shop, Los Angeles, California.— FW jewelry and were taught by the Wallaces, who enjoy training staff members with no preconceived ideas about jewelry. Says Sam: "If we are going to be unique, we have to figure out our own way of doing things." No one could deny that Sam and Denise Wallace have done so. * LAPIDARY JOURNAL, September 1992