46
William Harper
(b. 1944)
Brooch Jabberwock (Knee Play) 1976
Estimate: $20,000-$30,000
Sold
$14,000
Live Auction
Modern Design
Location
Chicago
Size
6⅜ h × 3 w × 1 ½ d in (16 × 8 × 4 cm)
Description
William Harper
(b. 1944)
Brooch
Jabberwock (Knee Play)
1976
Gold and silver cloisonné enamel on fine silver; 14k gold, mirror, claw
6⅜ h × 3 w × 1 ½ d in (16 × 8 × 4 cm)
This lot is located in Chicago.
Property from the Collection of Riva Margalit
Provenance
Signed on reverse; The Jabberwock's Jewel, William Harper, 1988. Note In this work, Harper pays homage to Lewis Carroll’s back-to-front world that came to life in Through the Looking Glass. Harper’s “knee plays” are titled such after he heard this term used by Robert Wilson and Philip Glass’s in reference to “one-off works that are complete unto themselves, but also have both physical presence and content suggestions of what might follow…”( Adamson, Glenn, and Martha J. Fleischman. Bizarre Beauty; The Art of William Harper. Arnoldsche, 2024, p.40)IllustratedAdamson, Glenn , and Martha J. Fleischman. Bizarre Beauty; The Art of William Harper. Arnoldsche, 2024, p.45. William Harper – Lot EssayArtist William Harper honed his jewelry making skills at Case Western Reserve and Cleveland Institute of Art from which he graduated in 1967. Studying with John Paul Miller and Kenneth Bates, he specialized in enamel work early on and wrote the masterful book Step-by-Step Enameling: A Complete Introduction to the Craft of Enameling in 1973 at age 29. It has been his primary medium since, and like history’s best painters, his voice is distinct.Harper’s artistic process is improvisational. He lets the materials guide him and while each piece may stand alone, his carefully titled series provide context to the work. His iconography includes diverse global cultures, religious, and gender references.Each one-of-a-kind work is a colorful primal fantasy. The intricate cloisonné enamels possess vibrant color palettes and abstract lines. Yet, Harper’s work is not solely dependent on enamel and interplays with his master hand work as a goldsmith and his interest in assemblage.Rare to auction, Harper’s sculptures are often containers that appear crudely created yet contain precious jewelry. Harper intentionally seeks this dichotomy. They are called “casks” or “books” and are the artist’s own expression paying homage to African Nkisi Nkondi, Joseph Cornell’s boxes, or religious reliquaries.William Harper once said, “There are painters who are craftsmen; there are jewelers who are artists, I maintain that the finest art, in any medium, results from those who are both artists and craftsmen.”