[{"ID":13217,"post_type":"programs","title":"Dialogue + Studio: Mourning Jewelry 2\/7\/17","content":"","status":"publish","date":"2016-09-22 14:26:55","name":"mourning-jewelry","parent":0,"modified":"2018-07-09 14:55:41","series?":"Program","category":{"term_id":27,"name":"Workshops","slug":"workshop","term_group":0,"term_taxonomy_id":27,"taxonomy":"category","description":"","parent":18,"count":0,"filter":"raw"},"main_image":{"ID":13252,"id":13252,"title":"Screen Shot 2016-09-21 at 12.46.50 PM","filename":"Screen-Shot-2016-09-21-at-12.46.50-PM.png","filesize":487350,"url":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Screen-Shot-2016-09-21-at-12.46.50-PM.png","link":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/exhibitions\/securing-the-shadow-posthumous-portraiture-in-america\/screen-shot-2016-09-21-at-12-46-50-pm\/","alt":"","author":"16","description":"","caption":"Harriet Mackie (The Dead Bride) \nP. R. Vall\u00e9e (act. 1803\u20131815)\nCharleston, South Carolina\n1804\nWatercolor and graphite pencil on ivory\n2 7\/16 x 1 15\/16\"\nCollection Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut\nMabel Brady Garvan Collection, 1936.300\nPhoto courtesy Yale University Art Gallery","name":"screen-shot-2016-09-21-at-12-46-50-pm","status":"inherit","uploaded_to":12992,"date":"2016-09-21 16:47:23","modified":"2016-09-21 16:47:37","menu_order":0,"mime_type":"image\/png","type":"image","subtype":"png","icon":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/site\/wp-includes\/images\/media\/default.png","width":432,"height":620,"sizes":{"thumbnail":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Screen-Shot-2016-09-21-at-12.46.50-PM-150x150.png","thumbnail-width":150,"thumbnail-height":150,"medium":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Screen-Shot-2016-09-21-at-12.46.50-PM-209x300.png","medium-width":209,"medium-height":300,"medium_large":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Screen-Shot-2016-09-21-at-12.46.50-PM.png","medium_large-width":432,"medium_large-height":620,"large":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Screen-Shot-2016-09-21-at-12.46.50-PM.png","large-width":432,"large-height":620,"1536x1536":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Screen-Shot-2016-09-21-at-12.46.50-PM.png","1536x1536-width":432,"1536x1536-height":620,"2048x2048":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Screen-Shot-2016-09-21-at-12.46.50-PM.png","2048x2048-width":432,"2048x2048-height":620}},"list_image":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/content\/uploads\/2016\/08\/Screen-Shot-2016-09-21-at-12.46.50-PM.png","headline":"Dialogue + Studio: Mourning Jewelry\u2014SOLD OUT","di_date":"2017-02-07","excerpt":"
Jeweler and educator, Karen Bachmann, will lead a mourning jewelry workshop, in which participants are taught the tradition of hairwork jewelry.<\/p>\n","start_time":"6:30 pm","end_time":"8:00 pm","performer_or_host":"Karen Bachmann","admission":"$25 members, students, seniors; $30 non-members","main_content":"
SOLD OUT\u2014Jeweler and educator, Karen Bachmann, will lead a mourning jewelry workshop, in which participants are taught the tradition of hairwork jewelry. Participants will produce hairwork flowers. All materials will be provided. Limited to 12 participants.<\/p>\n
Karen Bachmann specializes in jewelry, hollowware, and decorative art. She has special interests in medieval, memento mori, Renaissance, baroque, and nineteenth-century work. She is a practicing studio jeweler with over twenty-five years of experience creating fine jewelry and is a former master jeweler at Tiffany & Co. Her work, which can be found in international private and public collections, has been exhibited extensively. She teaches in both the art history and fine art departments at Pratt Institute. She is also an adjunct professor at the Fashion Institute of Technology. Karen is an artist and scholar in residence at the Morbid Anatomy Museum in Brooklyn. Her work has been published in\u00a0Art Jewelry Today<\/em>\u00a0and the Lark Craft’s 500<\/em>\u00a0book series. Published works include\u00a0Hairy Secrets: Human Relic as Memory Object in Victorian Hairwork Jewelry<\/em>\u00a0and\u00a0Queen of the Stone Age: The Venus of Willendorf<\/em>.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Harriet Mackie (The Dead Bride)<\/em>, P. R. Vall\u00e9e (act. 1803\u20131815), Charleston, South Carolina, 1804, watercolor and graphite pencil on ivory, 2 7\/16 x 1 15\/16 in., Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut, Mabel Brady Garvan Collection, 1936.300. Photo courtesy Yale University Art Gallery.<\/span><\/p>\n","show_in_past_programs":true,"reserve_text":"Reserve tickets","reserve_link":"https:\/\/www.eventbrite.com\/e\/dialogue-studio-series-mourning-jewelry-tickets-27909714708","day":"07","month":"Feb","year":"2017","link":"http:\/\/folkartmuseum.org\/programs\/mourning-jewelry\/"}]