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Fantastic in Plastic: Jewelry from the Lois Boardman Collection

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PLASTICS. With one word The Graduate helped define a generation, one that sneered at the perceived superficiality of American life and its “artificial” products. While the material was ubiquitous in industry by the time the film hit theaters in 1967, jewelers were just beginning to grapple with plastic’s potential. It was an inexpensive, malleable material, free of the value-laden connotations of precious metals and gemstones.

The Los Angeles County Museum of Art has received a remarkable gift of more than three hundred pieces of contemporary studio jewelry from South Pasadena collector Lois Boardman and her husband Bob, featuring work from the United States, Europe, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan. This fall LACMA will host the exhibition Beyond Bling: Jewelry from the Lois Boardman Collection, which will showcase the diversity of materials and forms studio jewelers have used over the last half century. Plastics are integral to many extraordinary works in the Boardman collection, and using examples from those holdings we can trace key moments and approaches to these manmade materials in studio jewelry. Over the last fifty years, plastics have gone from innovative industrial products to materials that permeate almost every aspect of modern life. This transformation has affected how jewelers approach these materials, ranging from an early and sustained enthusiasm for plastics’ creative potential to more recent critiques of their place in contemporary consumer culture.

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Bracelet, 1989. PMMA and plastic grout on polystyrene foam, 6 by 6 by 3 inches. | © PETER CHANG, LOS ANGELES COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART (LACMA), GIFT OF LOIS AND BOB BOARDMAN; ALL PHOTOS © MUSEUM ASSOCIATES / LACMA

Bracelet, 1989. PMMA and plastic grout on polystyrene foam, 6 by 6 by 3 inches. | © PETER CHANG, LOS ANGELES COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART (LACMA), GIFT OF LOIS AND BOB BOARDMAN; ALL PHOTOS © MUSEUM ASSOCIATES / LACMA

Working almost exclusively in plastics, Glasgow-based jeweler Peter Chang finds joy in “exploring their qualities of malleability, creating colour and sensuality, [and] teasing the materials to obey” as he wrote in 2002. Trained as a graphic designer and sculptor, he turned to jewelry in the early 1980s. Typically building on a lightweight polystyrene-foam core, Chang applies fiberglass, plastic tesserae, thermo-formed components, and pigmented resins to create meticulously crafted and highly imaginative works.

Bracelet, 1995. PMMA and resin on polystyrene foam, 6 by 6 by 2 inches. | © PETER CHANG, LOS ANGELES COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART (LACMA), GIFT OF LOIS AND BOB BOARDMAN; ALL PHOTOS © MUSEUM ASSOCIATES / LACMA

Bracelet, 1995. PMMA and resin on polystyrene foam, 6 by 6 by 2 inches. | © PETER CHANG, LOS ANGELES COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART (LACMA), GIFT OF LOIS AND BOB BOARDMAN; ALL PHOTOS © MUSEUM ASSOCIATES / LACMA

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