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From Strict To Amorphous -
An Italian Signature By Dr. Christianne Weber-Stober Issue 5, Autumn 2004 |
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Born in Santa Giustina in Colle in the Province of Padua in 1958, Alberto Zorzi now lives in Loreggia, close to Padua. When his interest in goldsmith art first kindled at the age of 15, it appeared only logical that he should be educated at the world famous "Istituto d'Arte Pietro Selvatico". In addition to textile design, painting, architecture, furniture and industrial design, the institute has initiated its students in the secret of jewelry design since 1966. This "College of Metal and Goldsmith Art" can thank the Padua-based goldsmith Mario Pinton (*1919) for its international reputation. As a teacher and headmaster at the school, Pinton defined Its artistic thrust for many years and inducted a whole generation of goldsmiths in the "fine art" of jewelry design. The school found its artistic approach in geometry during the nineteen sixties, and also in the Bauhaus-inspired, classical form repertoire, which was based on the simplest basic forms such as rectangles, circles, spheres or cylinders.
Geometry - nature - geometry
Zorzi has drawn on new materials time and again over the last ten years: he created finger jewelry made of ivory for an international competition by the Erbach Ivory Museum in 1994; Zorzi also experimented with granulation, an old Etruscan ornamental technique, for the International Granulation Competition in 1996. At the end of the nineteen nineties, he created a series of pins and rings using vividly colored Plexiglas. From 1987 onwards, Alberto Zorzi taught at the "Istituto Pietro Selvatico", and he was soon employed as a lecturer at the European Institute of Design in Milan and the University of Florence. Since 1998, the jewelry artist has held a chair at the Academy of Fine Arts in Ravenna.
Zorzi and his love of the city
In addition to his work as a freelance artist, the artist also has contacts to companies that use his designs to produce small series' of jewelry and silver appliances. Some years ago, the Italian artist, who loves experimenting, created entirely new jewelry using the electroforming method in cooperation with Pampaloni Grandi Argenti in Florence. The amorphous bracelets, whose soft, almost velvety surfaces fascinate the observer, are manufactured in matt or high gloss-polished silver. The cooperation produced a silver vase object to mark this year's 14th Silver Trienale, it will be on show in the German Goldsmith House in Hanau until August 29, 2004.
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