Jane Adam is one of Britain's leading studio jewellers. Graduated from the Royal College of Art in 1985, she has taken part in hundreds of group and solo exhibitions in Britain and abroad. In many major public and private collections, including those of the Crafts Council, London; Victoria & Albert Museum, London; Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery; Cooper Hewitt Museum of Design, New York, USA; and Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, USA.

About Jane
Her jewellery is made in aluminium and, increasingly, in precious metals, semi-precious stones and pearls. It is made by hand, mostly by Jane herself, in her studio in central London. Her work is the result of twenty five years of ongoing innovation and experimentation with a modern industrial material: dyed anodised aluminium. With this everyday material, she creates something new and unexpected, pieces where soft marks in subtle colours exist on a shimmery, iridescent surface. She has created a repertoire of new processes of dyeing, mark-making, texturing and colouration which have inspired many other jewellers, though her work stands alone for its quality and originality. She is now also moving into new work in precious metals (fine silver and high carat gold) and stones, applying her own techniques of texturing and forming. She delights in the difference these pieces have from her aluminium work: their weight and substance, the inherent beauty and richness of a metal such as fine silver or 22 carat gold, and the colours, forms, and textures of semi-precious stones and pearls. Her approach is always to work with her materials to find out what they will do, and to push them to find new qualities within them. She then sets out conditions in which they will behave in a certain way, and so explores and exploits their particular properties, rather imposing her own preconceptions upon them. This approach gives her work an organic quality, which relates to natural forms and to the way they change and grow. Jane Adam creates pieces that extend traditional jewellery values: those of beauty, femininity and preciousness. Her work explores female sensuality, both in the nature of the forms themselves and in the way they feel when worn. Therefore, her most profound relationship as a maker of jewellery is with the wearers of her work. They enjoy the way her work creates empathy with them and enhances them, to say something about who they are. By thus becoming part of the wearer's experience and expression of her self, Jane Adam's jewellery is transformed and completed.
Further Images
Two mobiles:
dyed, anodised aluminium
and stainless steel.2002
Photo Richard Stroud
two necklaces
Neckpieces with two or four leaves
Anodised, dyed and crazed aluminium with stainless steel wires and freshwater pearls or semi-precious stones on nylon coated steel neck cable
Length of drops: 100 - 120mm
Size of cable: 300 or 400mm
Photo: Joël Degen
folded spiral bangles 2008
Banlges in anodised, dyed and crazed aluminium
Widths: 30, 40, 50 or 60mm
Photo: Joël Degen
Silver pod brooches 2006
Brooches in fine silver, sterling silver, 18 carat gold, oxidisation, loose undyed freshwater pearls.
Photo: Joël Degen
textured silver bangles 2008
Oval bangles in fine silver.
Size (left): 50 x 40 x 50mm
Photo: Joël Degen
Blue pendant 2006
Pendant of anodised, dyed and crazed aluminium with silver and 9 carat gold on silver cable
Length of pendant: 11cm.
Photo: Joël Degen
scribed necklace
Necklace of scribed oxidised silver and gold with aquamarines
Length: 500mm
2008
Photo: Joël Degen
double sided leaf necklaces
Anodised, dyed and crazed aluminium with oxidised silver catch and jump rings
Lengths: 400mm to 650mm
DN3 - DN6
Photo: ( Joël Degen