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Ancient artists carved cameos from shell or hard stone, exploiting natural color gradations to create low-relief designs. Often cameos are small, oval, and rather flat. In comparison, this brooch is unusually large and dimensional. The artist carved it from a Helmut shell, sometimes called the cameo shell. This enormous sea snail produces a thick shell that has large peaks that offer great depth for Shinji Nakaba to exploit for his sculptures. Here Nakaba was intentionally ambiguous in creating the irregular border and carved face. Looking at Greek art and thinking about historical antecedents, the artist created a ghostly figure that seems to be pushing through the white and brown shell. Nakaba hopes that the wearer, and viewer, will question the figure’s gender and emotion. Are they dead or alive? Are they sleeping? Crying?
Peace brooch
Shinji Nakaba (Japanese, born in 1950)
Japanese
2011
Medium/Technique
Helmet shell (aragonite), gold (18k), oxidized stainless steel
Dimensions
Length x width: 8.3 x 6.4 cm (3 1/4 x 2 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase with funds donated by Yvonne J. Markowitz in honor of Toni Strassler
Accession Number2015.157
CollectionsJewelry, Asia, Contemporary Art
ClassificationsJewelry / Adornment – Brooches
Ancient artists carved cameos from shell or hard stone, exploiting natural color gradations to create low-relief designs. Often cameos are small, oval, and rather flat. In comparison, this brooch is unusually large and dimensional. The artist carved it from a Helmut shell, sometimes called the cameo shell. This enormous sea snail produces a thick shell that has large peaks that offer great depth for Shinji Nakaba to exploit for his sculptures. Here Nakaba was intentionally ambiguous in creating the irregular border and carved face. Looking at Greek art and thinking about historical antecedents, the artist created a ghostly figure that seems to be pushing through the white and brown shell. Nakaba hopes that the wearer, and viewer, will question the figure’s gender and emotion. Are they dead or alive? Are they sleeping? Crying?
DescriptionCarved seashell brooch in the form of a crying or sleeping face with decorative carving along right edge that is inspired by ancient Greek art.
Signed
SHINJI NAKABA (raised along outer edge of brooch)
Marks
S. Nakaba/ 2011 Dec 8 (scratched on reverse)
ProvenanceBefore 2015, acquired by Mobilia Gallery, Cambridge, MA; 2015, sold by Mobilia Gallery to the MFA. (Accession date: February 25, 2015)
CopyrightShinji Nakaba