There is a human yearning to adorn
the body, from a modest row of pearls to the glittering bling-bling
of hip-hop stars. Fortunately, possession is not a prerequisite
for enjoyment in New York this winter, where a trio of jewellery
shows is likely to re-open the debate on whether jewellery should
be taken seriously by museums or dismissed as commercial investment.
Purists punished the Met for their 'Cartier : 1900-1939' show
in 1997, but it achieved one of its best attendance rates for
any exhibition - more than 420,000.
The Asia Society is well placed to match this
success, and to argue that jewellery should be taken very seriously
indeed. Upstairs in their luxurious polished brown granite prism
headquarters on Park Avenue designed for them by Edward Larrabee
Barnes Associates, where ladies lunch in the conservatory cafe
while the city's best Asia bookstore is always busy, more than
150 pieces of Indian jewellery from the collection formed by Susan
L. Beningson have their first public show.
In India, jewellery is not restricted to women,
nor is its function solely to display wealth. It signifies status
and class, expresses royal or religious allegiance, reinforces
contracts, glorifies the powerful, is essential to the intimacy
of love. For at least 5,000 years jewellery has adorned men, women
and, above all, temple deities, where jewellery is part of the
bond between the worshipper and the deity.
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