All about the Opal
$600 current bidDescription of the Item:
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Take home this beautifully designed Opal ring.
- Women's size 6 3/4.
- 18 karat gold.
- Opals are a unique stone because of their color, diversity, and uniqueness. Each opal differs from another, making them all individualistic.
- Opal is a fascinating mineral that displays a stunning array of colors, from fiery reds and oranges to cool blues and greens.
A little about the jeweler who designed the ring:
George Brooks (born George Rybnicek, September 11, 1925 - July 21, 2023) was a jewelry in Canada, and later relocated to Santa Barbara, California. Czechoslovak-born American jeweler. He was one of the first designers and fabricators of modernist and wearable art.
Career
Brooks's first apprenticeship was as a goldsmith with Henry Birks and Sons in 1948. He also set up a workshop at home where he could produce his own unique designs, markedly different to the conventional jewelry produced by Birks & Sons. In 1950, he transferred his apprenticeship to Georges Delrue, a French avant-garde jeweler based in Montreal since 1947. Delrue's work was influenced by European modernism, such as the work of Jean Arp, Joan MirÃ3, and Jacques Lipchitz, and his workshop was the first modernist jewelry workshop in Canada. Brooks worked with Delrue for seven years, where he learned from craftspeople such as the silversmith Hans Gehrig (1929-1989).
Gehrig and Brooks went on to found the Montreal Gem and Mineral Club in 1957. That same year, Brooks opened his first shop, which he sold in 1961. Brooks and his wife Jean then travelled, visiting gem sources around the world, including mining for opals, in Andamooka, South Australia. Brooks became a recognized authority on opals, amassing one of the world's largest collections of this gemstone.
In 1962 Brooks relocated to Santa Barbara, California, where he continued working and producing unique, one-of-a-kind pieces of jewelry until his retirement in 1991.
Exhibitions and legacy
Yvonne J. Markowitz, Curator of Jewelry at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, co-wrote an essay on Brooks for a book on his work published in 2010, in which she argued that Brooks's work had been largely overlooked due to "an accident of geography." In 1962, Santa Barbara was a small town which, although wealthy enough to enable Brooks to succeed enough that he had no need to publicize his work more widely, did not have the community to support modernist jewelers that existed elsewhere, such as San Francisco or Provincetown, Massachusetts. She also noted that the "pioneering modernists" in Canadian jewelry design had worked in relative isolation, with few links to the American or European studio jewelry movement.
In 2009, the Musée des maà tres et artisans du Québec held an exhibition on modernist art jewelry in Québec between 1950 and 1970, which showcased the work of Brooks alongside that of Delrue, Gehrig, and other Canadian jewelers.
Jewelry by Brooks is represented in the collections of several museums and institutions, including the Renwick Gallery, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
*Photo of George with Isabeau
Donated By In Memory of George Brooks