In person, I think that the red jasper beads work - looking at the photos, I'm not so sure. They're more rusty than red in real life. I guess I'll give it a few days to "cook".
http://www.wellcomecollection.org/whats-on/exhibitions/charmed-life/amulets-gallery.aspx#.T8kLbTydpLU.blogger
I happened upon this link when I was Googling the word "amulet" the other night. The page is about Edward Lovett's collection of the amulets created by people living in London at the beginning of the 20th Century and the photos are fascinating (to me at least). People have always wanted to feel that they had some way to control some small aspect of their lives. My friends and I carried brightly colored rabbit's feet as children and always had our eyes out for four-leaf clovers and lucky rocks and charms. The world we lived in was so beyond our control; it required magic to tame it. I find it incredibly touching to see these ordinary objects that gave their makers a link between the seen and the unseen.
I was at a bead show not too long ago and bought beads from a couple of gentlemen from Mali. They had a tray of North African pendants, mostly poor quality Berber-style pieces, but one dirt-encrusted Tuareg pendant caught my attention. I asked one of the sellers if it was worn for protection and he told me very sternly: "No piece of jewelry can protect you - only God can protect you! And for that to happen, you must open your heart to God." Well, perhaps he's right. But by my belief system, that act of opening your heart to the Divine, whatever you happen to call it, puts you in a sort of alignment or balance with other forces in the Universe - seen and unseen. Physicists and mystics of all persuasions know that everything is vibrating, dancing if you will. What if the hopes and wishes and prayers put into an amulet have their own vibrations? What if we can access those vibrations by contact with those objects and they can help us to open our hearts to the Divine within us? Or not. Maybe they're just curiosities that remind us about being very vulnerable human beings.
Nice necklace. I was just designing earrings with Chinese coins myself and I'm always fond of that crossways shell action. This piece of yours came out quite nice. Good greens.
ReplyDeleteAnother very interesting necklace, Maggie. I think the jasper works very well. Amulets - also talismans and charms - are very fascinating, aren't they? And strangely, even in our modern scientific world, people still use them... or perhaps, not so strangely...
ReplyDeleteGreat link, the video is really fascinating and fun too. Love the necklace and the shot of red works.
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