Remembering New York artist Daniel Brush, 1947 – 2022
In tribute to Daniel Brush, who has died aged 75, we revisit this 2020 Wallpaper* profile of the elusive New York artist by jewellery historian Vivienne Becker, who unravelled the secrets of his singular designs for her book, ‘Daniel Brush: Jewels Sculpture’
- (opens in new tab)
- (opens in new tab)
- (opens in new tab)
- Sign up to our newsletter Newsletter
It was a memorably mind-altering day, some ten years ago, when I first met the elusive, enigmatic artist Daniel Brush, and his wife and muse Olivia, in their vast Manhattan loft apartment. I love to retell the moment Brush emerged from his urban jungle of antique guilloché machines, dressed in his floor-length leather apron, huge leather gauntlets and magnifying goggles on an iron band pushed up over his brow.
Even more memorable is the moment, many visits and many stimulating conversations later, when Brush asked if I’d write a book about his jewels and jewel sculptures. There had, until then, been books on his paintings, on his entire canon, but nothing devoted entirely to his jewels.
It felt like a fantastic opportunity, but also a massive responsibility, to do justice to Brush’s awe-inspiring work as a goldsmith and jeweller, to convey the breadth, depth and complexity of his thinking, the philosophy and idiosyncratic world-view that underpins, informs and shapes his work. It’s best summed up, perhaps, when he says, ‘Jewellery is a vehicle to get closer to the gods, a conduit to allow dreams into our lives, into the maze of it all.’
Daniel Brush is eccentric, obsessive, reclusive and intense, with a mighty intellect and a childlike joy, serious yet playful; a fanatical collector, of objects as varied as medieval scissors, Victorian snuff boxes and 1970s watches, and an avid student of subjects as diverse as Japanese Noh theatre and Beat poets. He’s extraordinary, too, in that, as a goldsmith and jeweller, engraver, diamond-setter, he’s entirely self-taught. And despite the ingenuity of his skills, he believes that if the object ‘speaks with clarity’, the craftsmanship should completely disappear. It is lightness of spirit, not virtuosity, that he seeks.
Brush has a rare ability to move between creative disciplines, to be fine artist, sculptor, goldsmith, metalworker, jeweller, poet and installation artist, all with equal passion and reverence. For this reason, his jewels defy categorisation. He began making jewels as a hobby, as respite from the physical demands of his large-scale paintings and sculptures. He had been captivated by gold since seeing an Etruscan gold bowl in the V&A Museum as a young boy on a visit to London with his mother.
So, in the 1980s, he started his adventure in jewellery by tackling the ancient Etruscan technique of granulation, soldering minute gold grains to a gold surface. Having mastered this near-mystical skill, he moved on to more conceptual, sculptural works using steel, often melding its dark toughness with the illuminating softness of gold. He progressed to working in stainless steel and then aluminium, metals that fascinated him for their strength, history and engineering connotations, which enabled him to debunk what he calls the ‘total construct’ of the intrinsic value of gems.
He taught himself the art of engraving, in his characteristic obsessive way, studying for years, learning the intricacies of banknote engraving, making his own tools, exploring and experimenting. Until out of these industrial, masculine and mundane metals, he was able to coax and conjure up divine light, silky sensuality, organic or graphic line and form and exquisite, thought-provoking jewels and objects. Line, light and depth of meaning run like leitmotifs through the various series of jewels charted in the book. Once Brush finds a concept, a ‘big idea’ that challenges him, he works feverishly, handcrafting hundreds in each series, each jewel or object individual, yet connected in its message.
The book is arranged thematically, each chapter unravelling and reconstructing the meandering thoughts, the mercurial ideas behind each series, charting the journeys into history, into Mughal India or Imperial China, into Brush’s febrile imagination and worlds beyond.
There are the lilting, poetic steel poppies; the charming Loose Threads, made to mimic the squiggles of silk that end up on textile artist Olivia’s clothes at the end of her day; Animal Crackers, his menagerie of charming Bakelite and diamond-studded animals; and Thinking about Monet, where steel brooches summon images of Monet’s haystacks through a bewitchingly mysterious process of engraving that captures colours of sunrise and sunset.
There is also Cuffs, a series of steel bangles with provocative messages, and Necks, an unrequited ode to the neck in the form of an installation of 75 steel chokers, as well as the bead necklaces in Amber Kingdom, which pay homage to the glories of Mughal India, and Necklaces for the Empress Dowager, which are designed only to be worn when seated. And so much more, offering the sense of abundance and unfettered passionate joy that is a vital part of this cerebral body of work, so new, so different, yet so connected to 5,000 years of jewellery history.
I tried to write each chapter as if the stories behind each ‘big idea’ were being told by Brush himself, in his engaging, low-key, colloquial manner, sitting around his wooden table, with Olivia, in the stillness and expanse of the loft. Drawing us all into his world, changing our vision of the jewel. Pure alchemy.
This Wallpaper* article dates from 2020.
Daniel Brush: Jewels Sculpture, $65, by Vivienne Becker, published by Rizzoli Electa, rizzoliusa.com
-
Last chance to see: Cyprien Gaillard on chaos, reorder and excavating a Paris in flux
We interviewed French artist Cyprien Gaillard ahead of his major two-part show, ‘Humpty \ Dumpty’ at Palais de Tokyo and Lafayette Anticipations (until 8 January 2023). Through abandoned clocks, love locks and asbestos, he dissects the human obsession with structural restoration
By Harriet Lloyd-Smith • Published
-
Visit Valencia in 2023: what to see, from ceramics studios to coffee shops
Visit Valencia, as Wallpaper* contributor Blaire Dessent whisks us from an artful hotel to the birthplace of a classic Spanish cocktail in a design-led guided tour
By Blaire Dessent • Published
-
Men’s Fashion Week A/W 2023: what to expect
We look forward to Men’s Fashion Week A/W 2023 with must-watch moments from Martine Rose, Gucci, Louis Vuitton and more at Pitti Uomo, Milan and Paris
By Jack Moss • Published
-
Remembering artist Ashley Bickerton (1959 – 2022)
Ashley Bickerton, known for his subversive, conceptual takes on consumerism, has died aged 63. We explore his life, work, and extraordinary studio, photographed in 2017 when Wallpaper* US director Michael Reynolds and Stephen Kent Johnson visited the artist
By Martha Elliott • Last updated
-
Remembering Pierre Soulages (1919-2022), a pioneer of post-war abstraction
Pierre Soulages, the pioneering French printmaker, sculptor and ‘painter of black’, has died aged 102
By Diane Theunissen • Published
-
A tribute to William Klein (1928-2022), legendary photographer of urban life
William Klein, the American-French artist responsible for transforming the worlds of fashion photography, street photography and cinema verité, has died in Paris aged 96
By Tom Seymour • Last updated
-
Remembering the mind-bending art of Dan Graham (1942–2022)
American artist and writer Dan Graham, whose hybrid output warped perceptions and defied genre has died in New York aged 79
By Harriet Lloyd-Smith • Last updated
-
The remarkable life of artist Carmen Herrera: 1915-2022
Carmen Herrera, the Cuban-born American artist whose experiments with space and colour blazed a trail in geometric abstraction, has died in New York aged 106
By Diane Theunissen • Last updated
-
Remembering Lawrence Weiner (1942–2021)
We pay tribute to American conceptual art pioneer Lawrence Weiner – known for his philosophical heft, linguistic dexterity and political candour – who has passed away aged 79
By Harriet Lloyd-Smith • Last updated
-
Etel Adnan obituary: 1925 – 2021
We remember Etel Adnan, writer, artist and pioneer in Arab-American culture, who has died in Paris aged 96
By Diane Theunissen • Last updated
-
Architectural photographer Dennis Gilbert (1951-2021): an appreciation
Architectural photographer Dennis Gilbert has died aged 70. Founder of View Pictures, one of the foremost agencies for architectural imagery, and an honorary fellow of RIBA, he helped shape our perception of contemporary architecture
By Jonathan Bell • Last updated