Two days ago, Daniel and I were sitting in a cafe in Paris and he said, “We should’ve tracked down Tobias Wistisen since we are here; he makes great jewelry.” That’s why I was pleasantly surprised to find Wistisen a few hours later at the Tranoi fair. The Danish designer cut his teeth assisting John Galliano, but he was inevitably drawn to jewelry design. “Paris has a deep tradition of jewelry making,” he told me. Wistisen works with artisans many of whom are well into their 60s and 70s, and he is taking full advantage of their skills. “They get so excited when you ask them to experiment,” said Wistisen, “because they are tired of making wedding bands.” That’s where Wistisen comes in with his unconventional designs and unusual metal treatments.
Photography by Eugene Rabkin
There are stores that make you want to shop there just because. If you had…
The work of the French-American artist Louise Bourgeois is primal. Primal attachment and primal fear,…
The introduction of movement into sculpture. That implausible leap from the static to the temporal.…
Tired of generic gift guides? We've got you. As is our annual tradition of doing…
The newly opened Jil Sander flagship in Tokyo’s Ginza district, designed by the architecture firm…