Octavia Cook | |
---|---|
Born | Octavia Cook 1978 |
Education | Bachelor of Design (Jewellery), Unitec Auckland |
Known for | Jewellery |
Octavia Cook (born 1978) is a New Zealand jeweller. [1]
Cook graduated in 1999 with a Bachelor of Design in jewellery from Unitec Auckland where among other tutors she studied with Pauline Bern. [1] [2]
Cook's work examines the concept of identity and the inherent values attributed to jewellery. [3] [4] She says 'My work references familiar historical jewellery motifs, like the bow, skull, and cameo silhouette, which balance the personal nature of my subject matter'. [5] : 88
In 2002 Cook began working with the cameo form for which she has become known. [5] : 88 [6] She has several series of rings, brooches, earrings and necklaces that play with the ideas of cameos, mourning jewellery, and identity. [4] For example, her 'Loved and Lost' brooches from 2006 take the form of updated mourning jewellery, but bear the faces of Cook family pet that have died, and have individual titles such as Lucky Cook', 1982-1991 and Sooty Cook, 1986-1987. [5] : 88 Another work, OC v QEII (2006) is a reversible red and white brooch hung from a large bow, with Cook's and Queen Elizabeth II's profiles on either side. [4] Also unconventional is the increased size of the brooches, and the use of brightly coloured acrylic. [5] : 89
In 2002 Cook also 'launched' her imaginary company Cook & Co, under which she produced her work for several years. [4] Cook & Co draws a fictional link between Cook and Captain James Cook, and important figure in New Zealand history, and also plays on the name of famous jewellery brand Tiffany & Co. [5] : 88–89 She produces themed branding and packaging that riffs on the branding and marketing strategies of international jewellery companies. [5] : 89 Art critic Virginia Were writes 'Cook's autobiographical references and her lighthearted take on the weighty history of jewellery give her work a contemporary edge that propels it way beyond the confines of craft and art'. [5] : 89
Cook has exhibited both nationally and internationally. [7] [8] Her solo exhibition Dynasty: Works by Octavia Cook was held at The Dowse Art Museum in 2012. [9] In 2023, Objectspace held the exhibition Cook & Company which featured new work by Cook alongside older pieces borrowed from private lenders and public institutions. [10]
Cook's work is held in numerous collections such as the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, Auckland War Memorial Museum, Govett-Brewster Art Gallery and The Dowse Art Museum. [11] [12] Cook is a Special Advisor for the Objectspace Charitable Trust. [13]
Jane Dodd is a New Zealand musician and contemporary jeweller. From 1982 to 1984 she studied for a Bachelor of Arts at the University of Otago, majoring in Phenomenology of Religion with additional papers in Anthropology, History, Art History, Maori Language and Philosophy. She is well known for her role as a bass player in early Dunedin-based Flying Nun Records groups The Chills and The Verlaines, was a long-standing member of Auckland group Able Tasmans, and occasionally played with side-project The Lure of Shoes.
Kobi Bosshard is a Swiss-born New Zealand jeweller. Bosshard was one of a number of European-trained jewellers who came to New Zealand in the 1960s and transformed contemporary jewellery in the country; others include Jens Hoyer Hansen, Tanya Ashken and Gunter Taemmler.
Alan Chris Preston is a New Zealand jeweller. His work has been exhibited widely in New Zealand and internationally, and is held in major public collections in New Zealand.
Warwick Stephen Freeman is a New Zealand jeweller.
Pauline Bern is a New Zealand jeweller.
Matthew McIntyre-Wilson is a jeweller, weaver of accessories inspired by traditional Māori artefacts. He is a Ngā Mahanga and Titahi descent.
Fingers is a contemporary jewellery gallery in Auckland, New Zealand. Fingers shows and sells the work primarily of New Zealand jewellers, but also of international jewellers, mostly from Australia and Europe.
Tony Kuepfer is an American-New Zealand glass artist.
Chris Charteris is a New Zealand sculptor, jeweller and carver.
Lisa Walker is a contemporary New Zealand jeweller.
Karl Fritsch is a German-born contemporary jeweller who has since 2009 been based in New Zealand.
Malcolm Armstrong Harrison was a New Zealand clothing designer and textile artist.
Vivian Isabella Lynn was a New Zealand artist.
Suzanne Tamaki is a New Zealand fibre-based artist of Te Arawa, Ngāti Maniapoto and Tūhoe descent. She operates under the label Native Sista and was one of the founding members of the Pacific Sisters. Informed by indigenous concerns of New Zealand, Tamaki's jewellery, fashion and photography portrays a reclamation of colonised spaces. As Megan Tamati-Quenell writes of her work 'They are created conceptually, provocatively and with political intent'.
Andrea Daly is a New Zealand jeweller and arts teacher. She studied at Sydney College of the Arts, completing a Bachelor of Visual Arts in 1987. The following year, she gained a Post Graduate Diploma in Visual Arts majoring in contemporary jewellery. In 1998, she completed a master's degree in Philosophy majoring in Art History at Auckland University
Areta Rachael Wilkinson is a New Zealand jeweller.
Paul Geoffrey Annear was a New Zealand contemporary jeweller.
Eléna Gee is a New Zealand jeweller known for her combination of metal work with organic materials, specifically pāua shell. She was a prominent figure in the Bone, Stone, Shell movement in 1980s New Zealand. She has had a long career with her work touring around Asia and Europe.
Jo Torr is a New Zealand artist. Torr's work explores cultural exchange between European and Polynesian peoples through the lens of costume and textile history.
Lynn Kelly is a New Zealand jewellery designer. Her work is in the permanent collection of Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, the Dowse Art Museum and Auckland War Memorial Museum.