Description
Note: Shipping for this item is free. Please allow up to 6 weeks for delivery. Once your order is placed, it cannot be cancelled..
Condition: BRAND NEW
ISBN: 9783897906143
Year: 2021
Publisher: Arnoldsche
Description:
Karl Fritsch (b. 1963), master of extravagant rings, returns with a publication that lures us deep into his world. Ruby Gold is a 'no-frills' pared-back book, without pagination, without essays. Instead it comprises eighty-one rings from the past twenty years featuring embedded gemstones and such memorable slogans as 'Fuck Off' and 'Nudelsuppe (Noodle Soup).
The jewellery artist's unmatched mastery of material and expression is apparent in every single ring, and every piece possesses tremendous energy as a result of the delicate yet archaic handling of the precious metals: Karl Fritsch carves in silver, shapes in gold, sets rubies and zirconias as a child would decorate a cake ” with self-confidence and with no regard for waste.
In between the detailed illustrations, Fritsch brings the rings and fingers into ironic dialogues with each other: 'Ring: I am art. / Finger: Oh come on...' And: 'Ring: I am a ring. / Finger: You are unwearable.'
Condition: BRAND NEW
ISBN: 9783897906143
Year: 2021
Publisher: Arnoldsche
Description:
Karl Fritsch (b. 1963), master of extravagant rings, returns with a publication that lures us deep into his world. Ruby Gold is a 'no-frills' pared-back book, without pagination, without essays. Instead it comprises eighty-one rings from the past twenty years featuring embedded gemstones and such memorable slogans as 'Fuck Off' and 'Nudelsuppe (Noodle Soup).
The jewellery artist's unmatched mastery of material and expression is apparent in every single ring, and every piece possesses tremendous energy as a result of the delicate yet archaic handling of the precious metals: Karl Fritsch carves in silver, shapes in gold, sets rubies and zirconias as a child would decorate a cake ” with self-confidence and with no regard for waste.
In between the detailed illustrations, Fritsch brings the rings and fingers into ironic dialogues with each other: 'Ring: I am art. / Finger: Oh come on...' And: 'Ring: I am a ring. / Finger: You are unwearable.'