Monday, 22 July 2019

Happily ever after

Cinderella 

When I embarked on the journey of creating a bridal themed collection, I was soon faced with the challenge, would I as a jeweller follow the status quo by creating jewellery which would paint a narrative identical to the one portrayed by media? Or would I create a collection of jewellery based on the narrative of millions of women and young girls who never find this Prince Charming?
The above picture is an example of what media portrays, as appealing as it may be create the Cinderella tale, I felt that there were some real stories which were being swept under the red carpet she walks on. 

Therefore with my work, I wanted to try to narrate the bridal/ umakoti narrative of those who never got to live that fairytale ending. I feel that as much as they are represented in statistics and numbers, that those were and are lives, which have stories and perspectives which need to be told. Their lives are not just more stories, but their reality.

I have therefore tried to use jewellery alongside poetry in order to capture these idea. Within a story, a movie to be specific its not just the words which express the story, but all the small pieces which inform one story, such as the lighting, the music, the props and clothing. In a similar way, the jewellery which I will be making will also rely on the colour, the textures, the words and the symbols in order to effectively portray the narratives.