Plastiglomerate

reference for jewellery in science

The term “plastiglomerate” refers most specifically to “an indurated, multi-composite material made hard by agglutination of rock and molten plastic. This material is subdivided into an in situ type, in which plastic is adhered to rock outcrops, and a clastic type, in which combinations of basalt, coral, shells, and local woody debris are cemented with grains of sand in a plastic matrix.”

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Riso Amaro

reference for jewellery in film

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Riso Amaro (1949) is an italian film written and directed by Giuseppe De Santis in the style of Italian neorealism. Two characters, Walter and Francesca are fleeing the cops with a stolen diamond necklace. While running in the train station, Walter slips the jewellery to Francesca and shoves her towards the train. The train sill bring her to the North of Italy where she will be working on the rice fields. After boarding she meets Silvana with whom she is forced to become friends with when Silvana finds out about the necklace. As Francesca and Silvana get to know each other better, the bonds of their relationship provides a strand of dramatic tension by the burden of the necklace. Silvana is soon overcome by jealousy and she takes the stolen diamond necklace.

After long days of labour Francesca dreams of the possibility of an easier life with Walter and the necklace, far away from the rice field. Meanwhile Walter arrives and he starts to manipulate both women to his own ends. He dreams up a scheme and convinces Silvana to help him by betraying the community of rice workers.

There is a shot in the film when Silvana is dancing, she lifts her long hair in order to flaunt the stolen necklace on het throat and to remind Francesca on the crime. In the end, Silvana shoots Walter and realises, that the necklace – the engine of the whole action – is fake and commits suicide.

A fake diamond necklace coveted by two women. Jewels, ambiguity, transitoriness, a pretext to subvert the whole notion of what is real. This is what turns rice (in the untranslatable double meaning in Italian of ‘rice’ and ‘laughter’) bitter.

sources                                                                                                                                                Bitter Rice                                                                                                                                              Poetics of Neorealism: Tragedy in the Italian Cinema 1942-48                                                              Plot Summary

 

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The Proposal by Jill Magid

reference for jewellery in architecture

In her latest multimedia work, American artist Jill Magid has converted the cremated ashes of Pritzker Prize-winning Mexican architect Luis Barragán into a two-carat diamond.

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Filmed Jewels

reference for jewellery in film

 

The Telephone Book (with pearls)

 

The Telephone Book

 

John Baldessari artist’s book from 1988 composed of cropped and obscured movie stills inhabited by either telephones, or pearls.