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THE ARTIST WHISPERER Elisabetta Cipriani

Elisabetta Cipriani looks back on a decade of artistic collaborat­ion to create wearable art.

- By SONIA KOLESNIKOV-JESSOP

In January 2011, Elisabetta Cipriani started correspond­ing with the influentia­l 1talian artist, -nrico Castellani, who as a member of the Zero avant-garde group had focused his practice on materialit­y of painting, giving his monochrome surfaces a sculptural aspect. Cipriani, a London-based gallerist who specialise­s in ‘wearable sculptures’, was determined to collaborat­e with one of 1taly’s most influentia­l contempora­ry artists. ¹1 started sending him regular letters and after two years he invited me to come to his castle in Celleno. That’s how our relationsh­ip started. 1 would go there for lunches# we would talk, but nothing concrete ever happened. And then one day, he took two metal sheets, his hammer and a chisel, and started to create what turned out to be the prototype for Superficie,” she says, recalling the creation of his limited edition of necklaces and bracelets.

¹That moment – 1 will never forget. After such a long time, 1 was no longer expecting he would actually do it. 1 guess he came to see me as someone he could trust, someone who was really committed to having a project with him.”

Perseveran­ce and caRoling skills have been crucial to the many proRects Cipriani has pulled off since establishi­ng her gallery in !.

¹There are some artists 1’ve been writing to for 1 years,º she says, ¹but 1’m not giving up until they tell me »no’. As long as they tell me they’re busy, 1’ll keep on trying. Aou have to be very persistent. 1’m working with artists, and they can’t be pressured, they can’t be hurried. 1 think that’s why 1’m so attached to these proRects. .or me, these pieces are like children.º

0aving studied art history and then briefly interned at Christie’s Old Masters department, Cipriani started her career as a curator for the Museo d’Arte Contempora­nea di Roma (Macro) before moving to London in to work for Ben Brown .ine Arts, a high-end art gallery specialisi­ng in contempora­ry art. ¹1 wanted to learn the business aspect of selling art, and this was a great place to do so,” she says. At the time, Ben Brown’s wife, Louisa Guinness, had a cabinet in his gallery for selling artist Rewellery and Cipriani gradually took charge of bringing this to art fairs. ¹1 felt that if 1 was going to sell these pieces, 1 needed to learn more about them, so 1 started to research and educate myself, and completely fell in love with the idea,” Cipriani recalls.

Cipriani discovered a world she knew little about and Yuickly

“I felt that if I was going to sell these pieces, I needed to learn more about them, so I started to research and educate myself, and completely fell in love with the idea” – Elisabetta Cipriani

became besotted. Artists like Alexander Calder, Salvador Dali, Max Ernst, Niki de Saint Phalle and Pablo Picasso had all created artistic jewellery, but Cipriani was more interested in working with contempora­ry artists and set out to become the link between their vision and her goldsmith in Rome.

.or her first collaborat­ion in !, she approached Japanese installati­on artist Tatsuo Miyajima, whom she knew from her days at Macro. Miyajima created the Time ring, a large ring with an LED display that works as a counter with changing numbers representi­ng the endless cycle of life. The wearer is able to customise the speed of the counter to reflect his or her own feelings about the pace at which their life is flowing.

Looking back on the last 1 years, Cipriani identifies her collaborat­ion with Ai Weiwei as one of the most memorable. The gallerist first met him in his studio in northern BeiRing, in 1 , at a time when the artist was under heavy surveillan­ce. “I still remember there were all these cameras from the police on the street. It was strange because I was happy to meet him, but afraid at the same time,” she recalls.

While Cipriani managed to convince him on the spot to collaborat­e, it would take another two years before the artist would put in her hand Rebar in Gold, a piece of handcrafte­d 4k gold formed to resemble rebar, the steel reinforcin­g used in constructi­on, which he had coiled to form a bracelet (a ring version is also available).

The jewellery was a continuati­on of Ai’s monumental installati­on Straight, which the Chinese artist created out of the tonnes of mangled pieces of rebar he collected after the ;ichuan earthYuake that had resulted in nearly , deaths. The work was a commentary on the substandar­d building methods used for regional government building projects, in particular schools.

“It is about commemorat­ion and memory,” Ai said at the time,

“Whether your memory or the one I have, that’s up to you, so you mould the piece to suit you. I used gold because it’s precious and that’s what life is. If you wear this piece in the name of memory of a life lost or your life ahead, that’s what matters. It’s all about respect for life.”

This year, Cipriani collaborat­ed with him once again to create two new gold rings with Egyptian-looking hieroglyph­ics that are actually Ai’s interpreta­tion of today’s human migration, with migrants’ stories unfolding under a mysterious half-moon.

¹These rings fit perfectly within his usual practice, because his work always has a reference to the past – in this case, the ancient Egyptian hieroglyph­s – but also expresses his concern about the human condition, the awareness of what it means to be trapped, and the freedom of travel,” Cipriani says.

Cipriani notes that when she started her business in !, it took a while to build interest because the market was still relatively unknown. Today, Cipriani receives an enquiry about her pieces every day, and prices have soared, particular­ly for pieces designed or made by the most establishe­d artists.

“My clients are primarily art collectors who understand the value of the piece as an artwork. They don’t blink at the fact that there are no precious stones on a piece that costs  , ,º she says.

To help clients start a collection and support less-establishe­d artists, Cipriani launched the -C Lab in 1 , where she invites young artists and designers to work on Rewellery for the first time. ¹These are relatively cheaper pieces. 1t’s not only to help young artists get into the field of wearable art, but also for young collectors to start their collection­s,” she explains. Among the collaborat­ions are Maria Sole Ferragamo’s architectu­ral leather jewels made with left-over leather, and one between Flavie Audi, a French-Lebanese glass artist, and Lebanese jewellery designer Noor Fares mixing rock crystals and Murano glass to create the Superlunar­y jewellery collection.

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THIS PAGE: ELISABETTA CIPRIANI
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 ??  ?? THIS PAGE: SUPERFICIE (2013) NECKLACE BY ENRICO CASTELLANI IN YELLOW SATIN GOLD
THIS PAGE: SUPERFICIE (2013) NECKLACE BY ENRICO CASTELLANI IN YELLOW SATIN GOLD
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TIME RING (2009) BY TATSUO MIYAJIMA IN YELLOW GOLD WITH BLUE LED
THIS PAGE: TIME RING (2009) BY TATSUO MIYAJIMA IN YELLOW GOLD WITH BLUE LED

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