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Kiff Slemmons

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Name
  
Kiff Slemmons


Education
  
University of Iowa

Kiff Slemmons Kiff Slemmons Art Jewelry Forum

Starting points kiff slemmons and glenn adamson in conversation


Kiff Slemmons (born 1944) is a contemporary American metalsmith. She received her B.A. in Art and French at the University of Iowa, but is primarily known for her career in jewelry and metals. Slemmons currently resides in Chicago, Illinois.

Contents

Kiff Slemmons Kiff Slemmons bioephemera

Childhood and early life

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Kiff Slemmons was born in Maxton, North Carolina but grew up in Iowa. In 1962 she enrolled in Scripps College in Claremont, California for comparative literature. She later attended the Sorbonne in Paris, France. She attended an eight-week metals program in Japan through Parsons The New School for Design in 1983.

Works

Since 2000, Slemmons has been recognized for her work with Mexican artists making and designing paper jewelry, resulting in colorful and intricate pieces using traditional bead-making techniques and dyes from indigenous plants.

Her own work includes historical and literary references, incorporating selected found objects, generally non-precious materials, which she fabricates into detailed pieces with silver and other metals. Slemmons expresses that three threads run through her work, "scale, the language of material and the idea of more than one to make one. She rejects the traditional valuation of jewelry based on the materials used, focusing instead on the ideas that go into each piece.

In her exhibition "The Thought of Things," Slemmons made jewelry that used parts of aged photographs, rulers, typewriters, and other found objects in order to elicit a direct personal response. Another series of works that question worth and value was the much talked-about "Re:Pair and Imperfection." In the process of preparing the series, she asked some of her peers to give her pieces that are unfinished because they are unwanted or somehow flawed. She used thirty donated objects of varying materials in the exhibition. These works included wearables and sculptures with ornate details. Her intention was to make the viewer question the nature of imperfection and contemplate the new meaning of unconventional repair.

Selected collections

  • The Victoria and Albert Museum
  • The Museum of Arts and Design
  • The Renwick Gallery
  • Mint Museum
  • The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
  • The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
  • References

    Kiff Slemmons Wikipedia