Home
Gianfranco Ferré: Under Another Light: Jewels and Ornament
Barnes and Noble
Gianfranco Ferré: Under Another Light: Jewels and Ornament
Current price: $55.00


Barnes and Noble
Gianfranco Ferré: Under Another Light: Jewels and Ornament
Current price: $55.00
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
With more than 100 photographs,
Gianfranco Ferré: Under Another Light
looks at the costume jewelry of Italian designer Gianfranco Ferré (1944–2007). Ferré himself said of this somewhat neglected side of his oeuvre: “intended as a decorative element of clothing, ‘my’ jewelry becomes a tool for its interpretation, for a subjective and individual reading of the garment. If clothing is an objectthe ‘thing is worn’then jewelry is the expression of the way, of ‘how it’s worn.’”
Amid the diversity of objects presented in this volume, there emerges a connection between bijoux and clothing collections, which Ferré always conceived in parallel with each other, and tied to the inescapable reference point, the human bodygiving preference to its key parts, from the neck to the wrists and the waist.
Gianfranco Ferré: Under Another Light
looks at the costume jewelry of Italian designer Gianfranco Ferré (1944–2007). Ferré himself said of this somewhat neglected side of his oeuvre: “intended as a decorative element of clothing, ‘my’ jewelry becomes a tool for its interpretation, for a subjective and individual reading of the garment. If clothing is an objectthe ‘thing is worn’then jewelry is the expression of the way, of ‘how it’s worn.’”
Amid the diversity of objects presented in this volume, there emerges a connection between bijoux and clothing collections, which Ferré always conceived in parallel with each other, and tied to the inescapable reference point, the human bodygiving preference to its key parts, from the neck to the wrists and the waist.