Simon Bliss, Senior Lecturer on the 3D Design and Craft BA(Hons) course at the university’s School of Art, explores the relationship between jewellery and modernism in the inter-war period in Europe and America with a particular focus on France and Germany.
The title of the book is ‘’.
Simon drew on archive material, contemporary journals, memoirs and theoretical texts to demonstrate how the emergence of modern jewellery began to question conventional notions of body adornment in that period.
Simon said: “Researching the book took me to museums, archives and libraries in London, Paris, Berlin and Pforzheim. I was lucky enough to meet some really helpful fellow scholars, librarians and curators who were very generous with their time and expertise.
“A particular highlight was my visit to the Bauhaus archive in Berlin, where I was able to examine surviving pieces of metalwork and jewellery by the designer Marianne Brandt at first hand. Next year sees the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Bauhaus.”