fbpx Skip to content

Farheen Ali: Moon Flask Earrings – Flower

$100.00

General

$90.00

Gardiner Friends


Qty.

(Gardiner Friends Save 10%)

In-store Pick up available for this item.

Description

Inspired by the Minton ceramics (G98.1.28) from Gardiner Museum’s 19th and early 20th century collection, artist Farheen Ali utilizes a mixture of elements such as handmade cloisoone bead, stainless steel, pearl, and lucite to capture the colours, motifs, and patterns that are so prevalent in ceramics from that period.

Care & Use: Protect jewelry from sharp blows, scratching and chemicals. To clean the pieces simply wipe them with a dry, microfiber cloth to remove dust and to maintain the shine of the crystals and stones. Never go swimming whilst wearing these pieces since exposure to chlorine can damage the metals present.

Material: Handmade cloisonne bead, stainless steel, pearl and lucite with 14kt gold filled earring hooks

Measurement (in.): L2-3

Weight (oz.): 0.2

SKU: 665121

About The Artist

Farheen Ali

Farheen Ali is a Toronto-based illustrator and jewellery artist. A medical illustrator by profession, Farheen has always been intrigued by organic forms and colors that exist in nature. Her training in landscape watercolour and Japanese sumi-e painting has inspired her to pay careful attention to and capture natural shapes in her artwork. Six years ago, she started to experiment with wire wrapped jewelry and discovered that she could create organic shapes and forms not just on a flat surface but in 3D as well. She now works with a palette of unique beads and found objects to create wearable pieces of art. Farheen’s works consist mostly of stainless steel and copper wire-wrapped statement necklaces, pendants and earrings. These utilize upcycled materials mixed with raw stones, Swarovski crystals and pearls. Each piece is one-of-a-kind and tells its own story depending on the where the different elements that create it have come from. When starting to build a statement necklace, Farheen Ali starts by selecting a unique bead or stone, which will become the focal point of the piece. Then using steel wire, wire cutters, pliers and dremel she drills holes and wraps a variety of other complementary beads and crystals one by one, building the necklace on a dress form, similar to as one builds a painting, stroke by stroke. Color and composition play an important role and as the piece grows. Adding different tints and textures results in creating balance and movement to the necklace, until the piece is complete.

View all Products from this artist

Items in your cart:
  • No products in the cart.