Patcharabhorn Lueraj (Thailand)

Patcharabhorn is currently working as a lecturer in the school of architecture and Fine Arts, University of Phayao, Thailand. Her profession is in craft practice, contemporary jewellery, and art textile. She prefers to work with various techniques in crafts such as weaving, ceramic, and metalwork. The subject of her interest generally is Asian culture and dance costumes.

Read More
Titus Razvan Popa (Romania)

With more than 20 exhibitions in Romania and abroad, Titus Razvan Popa, combines in a new way materials that at first glance are difficult to combine, especially ceramic with metal. The works, inspired by old cultures, brought to modernity, are approached with classical techniques, be it jewelery, ceramics or metal.

Read More
Farish Alborzkouh (Iran)

By definition is reporting the truth and hence documenting history. News have expiry dates, once they are announced they become 'the past' and burn and become irrelevant. Yesterday's news has no value for tomorrow's data. Giving value to something which has lost its value, creates a new definition of 'value'. Once headlines from

Read More
Teodora Nicut (Romania)

Focusing on my passion in sculpture and form modelling, I created this collection featuring unique, wearable pieces of art. Each piece was designed as a miniature sculpture, some later adorned with colour in the form of enamel and solvent based paints, others with the natural lustre of bronze.

Read More
Youjin Um (South Korea)

‘Memory is like a kaleidoscope. The kaleidoscope is full of beautiful little colored stones. ’ I heal and find consolation in precious memories of my youth. In a world that changes ever-more rapidly, our old memories fade and we grow tired. But we humans also find the strength to push our limits when we reflect on our memories.

Read More
Marie Jianu (Romania)

Marie Jianu is a contemporary jewellery designer, wife and mother, passionate metalsmith, artisan of personal harmony, transposed in metallic interpretations. Since 2011 she has participated in contemporary jewellery courses at Assamblage – Institute of Arts and Design alongside her mentors, David Sandu and Andreia Gabriela Popescu, and she has experimented with different techniques.

Read More
Young-ji Chi (South Korea)

The scattered outline and the dots passing through the shape are all made up of perfect circles. These perfect circular holes are empty spaces, but they become a medium for connecting shapes and spaces. The perfect circle is an artificial and modern concept. The combination of organic appearance and this modern form is contradictory but well matched. I expressed them in clear colors and movements.

Read More
Paula Petiz (Portugal)

Archaeology of the Senses' is about the rapport between the body and the world, mediated by mental representations built through the five senses. In Western society the supremacy of sight and hearing has prevailed, often ignoring human deprivations and the rest of the world. This work evokes the right to difference, by the way the five senses are hierarchized and connected, according to

Read More
Silvia Cruceru (Romania)

The persistence of memory The weft of time. The transience of people. The sediments of ages. (Im)permanent signs ... In the nostalgia of the great stages of life, its fleeting moments go unnoticed. But life is in fact composed of all these volatile moments: insignificant, planned, but also unexpected, abrasive, concealed in the less alluring appearance of precariousness.

Read More
Ziqing Wei (USA)

I am from Zhejiang, China. My works are inspired from my self observation. Maybe we always want to show a perfect self in front of others, but I have to admit that the imperfect and flawed me is the real me. I think the one we should understand and accept most in our life is ourselves, so I hope to remind people to know and discover ourselves through my works.

Read More
Assamblage AssociationUSA
Contemporia (Romania)

Jewelry as a state of mind. Contemploria jewels are imagined as extensions for the personality of the one who chooses to wear them not just elements that complement the outfit. They are dedicated to open-minded people, who love art and regard jewelry as an object in which the creator invested first and foremost his soul.

Read More
Alexandru Oancea (Romania)

I have liked jewelry since I have known myself. So much in fact that I tried swallowing my first one when I was two. Back then, my mom managed to stop me. Some fifty years later, I created my first jewelry. Another ring with a coloured stone, definitely not the same ring. And the first handmade jewelry that I was proud of, I gave it to my mom. What I did in the meantime is less relevant. I feel like I wasted time.

Read More
Renata Dragusin (Romania)

I create collections that bring together old techniques and modern technology. In my jewelry design I seek out the almost imperceptible details that surround us: line, color, form, and light in the subtle geometries of our everyday life. My designs combine the ultra modern and streamlined shapes with a finely delicate yet so powerful feminine aesthetic.

Read More
Zhuwei Lu (USA)

Zhuwei Lu was born in a suburb of Shanghai, China. After graduating from high school, she went to college in Wuhan to learn the traditional Chinese art of lacquer. After college, she chose to pursue her dream of becoming a jewelry designer and she came to the United States to study jewelry design at the Savannah College of Art and Design.

Read More
Leslye Zhang (China)

Leslye Zhang wishes her work presenting her personality could always hold the glamor and keep alive even when she immerses herself in the crowd. Based in Shanghai, China. She learned professional knowledge and skills of contemporary jewellery design in Metal Craft Studio at Shanghai University Academy of Fine Arts in 2018. And in the year 2021, she received

Read More
Yiota Vogli (Greece)

During this pandemic, creativity became, as always, my chosen way-out to maintain mental balance. Having just a few materials available at home, I started cutting, rolling and sticking masking tape pieces together. This became a calming meditative process which brought memories of a life so different compared to what we were suddenly forced to live in.

Read More
Tsagaantsooj Erdenechimeg (Mongolia)

Tsagaantsooj Erdenechimeg Contemporary artist • independent jeweler Born in 1989, Mongolia 2016 Bachelor Degree in ceramic art , Mongolian Academy of Fine Art 2011 Bachelor Degree in Tourism management, University of the Humanities 2022 Artist “Visual Sociology” Young Sociologist club, Mongolian National University. 2019 Art teacher “Re imagine UB” Art Council of Mongolia

Read More
Valeria Rossini (Italy)

Valeria Rossini was born in Verona in 1988. She started her approach to the jewelry world during her second year of Fashion Design study at Politecnico in Milan, where she got her master in 2012. Later, she continued her formation at Scuola Orafa Ambrosiana (Goldsmith School) and the Istituto Gemmologico Italiano (Italian Gemological Institute). In addition to her job as a gemologist for a large firm of top-quality jewelry in Vicenza, Italy, in 2016 she

Read More
Dimitrina Daneva (Bulgaria)

I am based in Sofia, Bulgaria. Despite my graduation in Geology my love for creating jewellery brought me to perfect myself in jewellery design. And somehow At the begining jewellery for me was a hobbie. I started with polymer clay and a couple of years later i got bases course and now i have my atelier at the center of the Sofia where i make my silver pieces of art.

Read More
Natalia Cellini (Italy)

I was born in Grosseto (Italy) in 1971. After graduating I attended a private school of decorative arts in Rome and in 1999 I opened my own art studio where I still work. Through my artistic research on materials I approached the world of jewelry, guided by a fascination for the matter which is present in all my works.I attended a workshop at a Tuscan goldsmith shop to learn the main processing techniques and other

Read More