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Golden Messages By: Christel Trimborn Issue 5, Autumn 2004 |
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As many and varied as the reasons may be to publicize a message or to make a very personal statement, the manners in which one can go about accomplishing it are equally manifold. Some people sit down and write a book -- others design jewelry.
Expert from Halle and Munich required almost a year in order to decode the religious inscription on a medieval, silver ring. The so-called "Paußnitz Ring" was found by a Saxon landowner on a field over 100 years ago. It was believed to have been lost for many years, but its engraved symbols have recently been decoded. The special feature of this finger ring, which is over 850 years old and which probably belonged to a crusader, is its dodecagonal form. Each of these twelve fields on the outside of the ring bears symbols and numbers that appear like letters. In laborious, detailed work, the experts discovered that the Irish script that was used until the 9th century was inversed and altered for use as templates for most of the symbols. The Munich-based historian and theologian Olaf Rohrer-Ertl translated the inscription "NEINE MI XPS" -which means as much as "negate (or destroy) me, Christ", as a symbol of the deepest religious dedication in order to attain salvation - an expression of the most private piety of the person wearing it. The extremely clever coding of the message also permits us to draw conclusions on the author or manufacturer of the ring: experts believe that he must have been a scribe with mathematical education, that he was familiar with the magical symbolism of numbers and that he was skilled in the writings of long dead ages and not only in the majuscule styles of the Gothic era that were becoming fashionable at the time.
Imaginative or just for fun
Even today, jewelry still bears many words and symbols. This may be a declaration of love, a name or two, a poem, a wish, a promise or a greeting -- they are all expression of a personal message. It is entirely of no consequence whether they are on rings, bracelets, pendants, brooches or cufflinks, whether they are large or small or in capital letters or freehand writing. The message itself is all that counts. Men and women feature in equal measure in the huge variety of possible designs and incurable graphomanics can draw just as much pleasure as convinced romantics. After all, personal taste is all that dictates the contents: whereas some people may insist on a personal message, others take pleasure in funny banality. Yvonne Les Crinier has designed a ring for the latter group, which bears an eternal truth on the addictiveness of shopping for female consumers: women always buy something.
Jewelry as a means of communication
The Dusseldorf-based designer Ariane Hartmann has for a long time used the written word to design her "Motto Collection". She stamps a repeated series of certain mottoes on a thin band of silver. These mottoes cover the entire band, which can be rolled up as a pendant, a ring or a bracelet. The person wearing the jewelry memorizes sentences marked in the metal such as "I am valuable" and "therefore find a way into his or her own soul", believes Ariane Hartmann. She has now completed a project in cooperation with the publisher Florian Langenscheidt, which combines the joint work between these two creative people. Langenscheidt, who publishes a book collecting the favorite sayings of German VIPs under the title "Motto meines Lebens" (Motto of My Life), is also a member of the charitable organization "Children for a better world". To mark the tenth anniversary, Ariane Hartmann engraved ten of her rings and ten of her armbands with a motto from the book. In addition to the marking 1/1 as a sign of its uniqueness, each item of jewelry also bears the year and the logo of "Children for a better world". At the start of July, the limited edition of rings and bracelets were awarded to people who had offered particularly distinguished service to the organization.
Lyrics and symbolism He considered questions such as: can forms have contents and how can I hold this unit for posterity? This gave him the idea of creating a ring that would remain clear in its statement over centuries. His "Text Band Ring", which received first prize in the competition, consists of a titanium band of any length that is marked permanently with texts, images and pictograms. lust like real life, this ring has a start and an end - What is written on it cannot be reversed and - just like in real life - things can be added, but nothing can be taken away A date of birth, a wish, a promise or a final farewell greeting - texts consisting of many thousands of words find space on this, the most individual of all items of jewelry.
Encrypted messages
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