Jewellery

These One-of-a-Kind Lapel Pins Take Inspiration From African Art

Glenn Spiro’s one-of-a-kind lapel pins make ancient motifs feel fresh, daring, and modern.
Jeweller Glenn Spiro used Baoulé artifacts, Roman-era bronze, and old-mine diamonds to create eight unique designs. Images courtesy of Glenn Spiro

Generations of creatives have been inspired by African tribal art, from Pablo Picasso’s stylised abstractions to Amedeo Modigliani’s mask-like portraits. It also captured the imagination of jewellery designer Glenn Spiro, whose London home is decorated with ritual masks, classic sculptures, and ancestor statuary from Côte d’Ivoire. “I’m attracted to African art,” he says. “I love the symbolism, the shapes, the spirit. It has inspired and permeated my designs.”

Over several years, Spiro and his wife, Arabella, have worked with Parisian gallerist Lucas Ratton to build their African tribal-art assemblage. Along the way he also acquired smaller relics, such as finely detailed 17th-century Baoulé gold fragments and old bronze pieces, which he incorporated into last year’s Materials of the Old World jewellery collection.

Images courtesy of Glenn Spiro

“These are chic, cool pins,” Spiro says. “I envision them on a men’s dinner jacket or leather jacket.” But they’ll look good on women, too. The striking arrow shapes are an empowering accessory, yet there’s a subtlety in the muted bronze, ebony, and antique diamonds (which have a softer shimmer than modern cuts). It’s not a piece of jewelry per se, he explains: “Rather, you are wearing a piece of art, a piece of history.”

Spiro is known for sourcing unconventional materials for his singular creations. In recent years, he made a set of bangles with first millennium B.C.E. Mesopotamian agate; earrings with Ziwiye gold medallions from the hoard of ancient artifacts uncovered in Kurdistan in 1947; and large matching cuffs combining carved buffalo bone with cognac and white diamonds. An insatiable collector, he often stores his discoveries for months or years before an idea strikes him or his son, Joe, with whom he works closely. That’s how the new brooches came to fruition. “We just started playing with these fragments,” he says, “and made something exceptional.”

Images courtesy of Glenn Spiro

Spiro is known for sourcing unconventional materials for his singular creations. In recent years, he made a set of bangles with first millennium B.C.E. Mesopotamian agate; earrings with Ziwiye gold medallions from the hoard of ancient artifacts uncovered in Kurdistan in 1947; and large matching cuffs combining carved buffalo bone with cognac and white diamonds. An insatiable collector, he often stores his discoveries for months or years before an idea strikes him or his son, Joe, with whom he works closely. That’s how the new brooches came to fruition. “We just started playing with these fragments,” he says, “and made something exceptional.”

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