FEATURE STORY
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Of all metals, gold is the softest and most malleable, yet has exercised the strongest hold on the human imagination. It appears naturally in its metallic form, which can be worked into complex shapes with the simplest bronze, bone, or wooden tools, meaning that gold could be worked into tokens, adornments, and talismans by the earliest craftsmen. In the modern age, contemporary goldsmiths are free to draw upon the entire history of gold work, echoing the past with ancient styles and techniques. All civilizations, with the exception of the early kingdoms of China and Japan, valued and coveted gold. From the earliest times it was sought after for its shiny, golden color, which many people believed to have spiritual or magical powers. And from the beginning, it was fashioned into ornaments for personal adornment. Many volumes could be and have been written on the history of gold jewelry to give a taste of this fascinating and complex subject, I have compiled a list of 12 insights into the world of ancient gold. |
Ancient Jewelry, by Jack Ogden; 1992, © The Trustees of the British Museum; University of California Press. Greek Gold, by Williams & Ogden; 1994, © The Trustees of the British Museum; Published by Harry N. Abrams Inc. Ancient Egyptian Gold Jewellery, by Carol Andrews; 1990, © The Trustees of the British Museum; British Museum Publications. Hooked On History (contemporary goldsmith Eve Afille) |
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By the second half of the third millennium BC, Egypt was circulating gold rings of standard weights as money. The Middle Kingdom, 2040-1730 BC, marks a high point in the art of the Egyptian jeweler. Ajoure, chasing, repoussé, inlaying in cloisons, and granulation were used. A cylindrical amulet case from 1900 BC shows the earliest example of soldered granulation, using a silver-rich gold alloy. By this time, jewelry had acquired elaborate amuletic, social, and decorative functions. It's interesting to note that silver was rarer and more valued than gold because it had to be imported. |
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From about 1000 BC, the seafaring Phoenicians spread new styles throughout the ancient world. Their motifs were derived from Egyptian patterns but were interpreted differently, using a great deal of granulation. Around 800 BC the Etruscans, from Italy, became a powerful maritime commercial power in the Mediterranean. Like the Greeks, they learned goldsmithing from the Phoenicians. The Etruscans colonized Iberia for its gold and became famous for their filigree and granulation work in which they depicted whole scenes in granulation instead of just geometric patterns. The Etruscans introduced coinage to early Romans and gave them their religion. Eventually they were absorbed by Rome.
In early Rome, jewelry was a luxury under official disapproval, but when Rome annexed much of the Hellenistic world, the old austerity quickly vanished. Romans were the first to use niello, a black sulfide, and they initiated a new technique of cutting out patterns with chisels to create a lacelike pattern (opus interrasile). In 214 BC, the Romans conquered Iberia in search of gold. To mine it, they dug tunnels through mountains until they collapsed and diverted rivers to wash away the debris. In this manner they produced about 13,000 pounds of the metal a year. However, they spent all the gold on luxury items and were bankrupt by 300 AD.
Antioch and Alexandria were the greatest centers of gold jewelry production until the 6th century, when Constantinople overtook them. Gems began to dominate gold work but niello and pierced work were still very popular, and the Byzantines also excelled at enamel work. This was a period of great wealth; when Emperor Anastasius died in AD 518, he left 320,000 pounds of gold in the treasury. In the 7th and 8th century, the jewelers in Constantinople enjoyed great prestige that extended far outside the empire. One of their necklaces has been found in a royal grave in China.
After 700 AD, the economic strength of Byzantium also drew gold out of Europe. The gold was traded for Byzantine luxury goods like silk, cotton, and linen. As a result, silver became the metal of choice for European jewelry and coins. During this period, European jewelry styles were also strongly influenced by Byzantium. In the 14th and 15th centuries, when the invention of the water wheel allowed mining in new areas, new sources of gold were found in Europe and more gold jewelry was manufactured. By the 15th century, standards were set and enforced for gold content in Europe. In England in 1478, all gold and silver, as well as the scales that weighed them, had to be brought to London to be tested and stamped; inspectors roamed the country for non-compliers. By the 15th or 16th century, Europeans also had drawplates with levers to pull wire.
The wealth of gold ornaments found in Mexico and South America reflected a long tradition of goldsmithing. For instance, from 200 BC-600 AD the Nazca people of Peru used repoussé, hammered, and cut gold for bracelets and nose ornaments. From 300 AD-800 AD, the Mochica added embossing, soldering, inlaying, plating, and casting, including lost-wax casting to the store of techniques. Motifs included cat-demons, birds, fish, animals, human figures, and severed human heads. In the 16th century, gold from the New World led to a surge in European jewelry production. Spain led the continent into an era of opulent adornment, while goldsmiths in France developed a wonderful technique for painting miniatures in enamel on gold. Cameos came into fashion as well. Competition among the courts of Europe for goldsmiths lead to a uniformity of style as princes vied to outdo each other.
Guilds controlled quality, production techniques, and apprenticeship. In Europe, communities of smiths flourished in Bruges, Utrecht, Lubeck, Florence, Strasbourg, London, Paris, and Cologne, continuing to grow, except during periods of the Black Death. Mesoamerican goldsmiths were also organized into fraternities, inhabiting particular areas and placed under the protection of specific deities. In general, goldsmith communities were not particularly well off. Clients provided the gold and the smith worked it, passing on skills and trade secrets from one generation to the next. It is much more common for us to know the name of the owner than that of the crafter of gold jewelry.
As the Roman Empire expanded, many goldsmiths migrated from the Greek East to Alexandria, Antioch, and Rome, where they began to organize guilds. In medieval times, goldsmiths migrated throughout Europe from one center of gold work to another seeking the most favorable circumstances. The city of Cologne alone sent smiths to Spain, the Baltics, Venice, Italy, France, and the Netherlands. Goldsmiths were also uprooted by war, often forced to move to new kingdoms as the captives of invading armies. This was the case when Nebuchadnezzar conquered Jerusalem, taking all the goldsmiths with him back to Babylon. Goldsmiths were so sought after that kings and princes would do anything to keep them at court, sometimes crippling them to keep them from fleeing. Perhaps that is one reason that smiths in mythology are often lame. The Greek God and goldsmith Hephaestos had two broken legs and walked with gold crutches; his Roman counterpart, Vulcan, was also lame.
In the early Christian era, gold was used for Church relics but people were discouraged from wearing it. However, these rules were not without exception. Clement of Alexandria in the late second century explains, Allowances must sometimes be made in favor of those women who have not been fortunate in falling in with chaste husbands, and who adorn themselves in order to please their husbands. From the 14th century, sumptuary laws restricted the wearing of gold jewelry in Europe to the wealthier or noble sections of society. Also, from the Middle Ages to the 18th century, gifts of gold chains traditionally rewarded loyal service to royal courts. The Inca associated gold with the solar deity Inti, and the Imperial ruler controlled the supply. Gold was not allowed in widespread trade and commerce; the ruler distributed it himself as insignia to nobles who distinguished themselves in battle or service. Wives wore gold ear flares to distinguish rank. From 1700-1900, the Asante controlled vast gold resources in Africa and used gold dust as currency, but gold jewels were restricted to the King, chiefs, and senior officials. At one time the Asante king required all gold ornaments to be melted down and recast each year; then he collected a tax on the new items.
In the third and fourth centuries AD, gold became the preferred metal for hair ornaments in China. These ornaments were decorated with filigree, granulation, and precious stones. Necklaces were very rare in China before the seventh century AD. In early Japan there was some ceramic and stone jewelry, but from the mid-seventh century onward, there was almost no jewelry of any kind apart from a few hair pieces. The custom of women wearing nose rings was introduced to India in the 9th or 10th century by Muslims, but never made it to Europe. Medieval jewelry was usually worn on clothing; brooches, rings, pendants, hat badges, and belt clasps were worn by both sexes. The heart-shaped ring brooch became a popular gift between lovers from the 14th century. As necklines fell lower and lower in the last decades of 15th century, the jeweled necklaces and chokers that had been so popular in classical antiquity came back in style and the medieval brooch fell out of fashion. Earrings and bracelets also reappeared. Wealthy or noble women began wearing pomanders and tiny prayer books, hanging from the waist on a long chain reaching almost to the floor. In Italy, women began to wear jewelry to enhance beauty instead of solely as a sign of rank. In the early Renaissance, men wore little jewelry with the exception of hat jewels, which were often quite elaborate. But gold chains became popular for both sexes. By the Baroque era (17th century), flowing silk fabrics replaced stiff renaissance fashions and the French court set fashions in Europe.
When Rome annexed most of the Hellenistic world, they began to use sapphires and uncut diamonds. The cutting and polishing of diamonds was a medieval development in the second half of the 14th century, when diamonds began to gain popularity in Europe. Other gemstones were cut and faceted from earlier in the 14th century when sapphires and rubies were in great demand. Cut stones became the focus of European jewelry in the 15th century, and goldwork was reduced to mere framing. The supply of stones and the technology to cut and polish them improved markedly in the 17th century.
In North Africa, the Sahara, and the Sahel, gold was considered an effective means of warding off the evil eye. But West Africans feared gold and avoided it because they believed it had a life of its own, an evil and dangerous spirit that had the power to kill, injure, or drive one insane. In Colombia, a combination of gold and copper called tumbaga was popular. It was the color, not the percent of gold content, that was important to the Inca, who associated gold with the solar deity Inti. To the Aztecs and Mayas, jade was more valuable than gold in fact, the Aztecs thought gold was the excrement of the gods. This belief certainly affected the way they regarded the Spanish lust for gold! However, the Aztecs did make gold nose ornaments and labrets that were worn through perforations in the lower lips of their rulers. In Greece, wealthy citizens as well as the state regularly made lavish offerings of gold jewelry and ornaments to the gods as a means of gaining favor and establishing status. Gold jewelry was placed on cult statues in the temples. Gold had no metaphysical value in Rome until 300 AD, when Constantine declared Rome Christian and melted down the statues of the old gods to mint coins and bail out the bankrupt kingdom. From then on, gold become an expression of light in the church, also held to represent the eternity of God because of its indestructibility, like the glow of the Holy spirit. It was used to adorn sacred basilicas, churches, and cathedrals until the late middle ages master goldsmiths worked 15 years on Charlemagne's reliquary in Aachen. Medieval goldwork was justified as praise to God, but was always controversial. From the earliest times, gold has played a central role in humanity's base struggles for power and wealth. At the same time, it has been closely linked to our efforts to connect with a higher being. In many ways, gold is an apt metaphor for these elements of human society that never change, even as empires rise and fall. Spain was plundered mercilessly for gold by the Etruscans and Romans, then went on to become a pillager of unequaled zealousness in the Americas. And the cycle continues to this day. Jewelers/galleries whose work are shown here are: Facere Gallery, Seattle, (206) 624-6768; Judith Kinghorn, 708 W. 26th St., Minneapolis, MN 55405, (612) 872-1977; Maija Neimanis, (212) 249-6236; Ron Messick Fine Arts, Santa Fe, (505) 983-9533; Bagués/Masriera, info@bagues.es, US office (800) 472-9872; Janus Jewels, (800) 664-1664, www.janusjewels.com. |
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Nina Cooper is a freelance writer and regular contributor to Lapidary Journal based in Oakland, California. She also owns Nina Designs, a wholesale mail order company that sells beads, components, and jewelry handmade in Bali.