'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': objet d'art.

Masons Jewellers

Product image 1'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': objet d'art.
Product image 2'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': objet d'art.
Product image 3'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': objet d'art.
Product image 4'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': objet d'art.

Regular price $4,400.00

'Quarantini for an Island Sabbatical': a Martini 'glass', with Corona Swizzle Stick. During the past week, the early part of our Self Isolation, I've fabricated this table-piece.
Over the decades, I've made quite a few different such vessels commemorating life events, and this one follows directly on from the very first one that I made, the 'Glass for Solitary Indulgence', for the Sculpture, Objects, Functional Art Expo in Chicago, in 1994, which image and story I posted on my FaceBook Page a couple of weeks ago.
There are a number of levels or layers to this piece, too much to fully go into in this post, but a couple of concepts are interesting enough to elucidate on the why's and wherefores...
I didn't invent the word 'Quarantini': it was coined for a drink somewhere recently, but I liked it so I built on it...
Quarantine has a fabulous history: it defined a period of forty days of isolation (from Italian, quaranta) during the Plague, when ships to Venice were required to ride at anchor for forty days before docking, to prevent the spread of disease. Interestingly, during the Plague, sailors from the Netherlands were the only ones who would risk provisioning London, after they'd firstly fortified themselves with gin, which lead to the expression 'Dutch courage'...
Why forty? Forty has always been a time of trial, based on the number of weeks of human gestation, at the end of which is a result; hence Foundation 41, the medical research organisation, principally investigating the causes of mental and physical handicap in babies, named after the first week of life, and which was based at the Crown Street Women's Hospital, Sydney; I was born there, but that is irrelevant; and the Italian for 'crown' is 'corona', but that is coincidental... And thereafter, the answer to 'life, the universe, and everything' is 42...
So, forty has been the traditional time of trial, ranging from 40 days and nights of rain in the Flood, through to 40 days traditionally spent by religious leaders in isolation, whether atop the mountain, or in the desert, or in the wilderness, or sitting meditating under a tree...
We are fortunate in places like Tasmania: being an island we can close our borders and moat ourselves; the foot of the vessel I've chosen to make triangular, which geometric shape is most frequently associated with Tassie... and the shape continues through the vessel itself... Beyond that, the piece makes use of the triangle, circle, and square, as so much of my work does.
Our quarantining has largely meant an end to commerce in the Arts, and so I feel like I'm on Sabbatical, although an unpaid one: the Sabbatical was traditionally a year off after every seven worked, during which travel or study may be undertaken; well, travel is out, but I have the luxury now of indulging in making table-pieces (objets d'art or objets de vertu, if you will) taking me back decades to a time when I was less 'under the pump', replacing stock, and so on; funnily enough, for years I've said that my best work was still ahead of me...
The Corona Swizzle Stick was one of those inspired moments, playing with the virus motif which we all know so well now; abstracting from it, exploding it open, adapting it to cruciform, lending the piece the overtone of religiosity which is so rife these days; similarly, making the vessel from metal, rather than from glass, lends it overtones of the chalice... No, I'm not espousing, merely reflecting...
I chose Jade, Tasmanian West Coast Jade, for the stem of the vessel: Jade has connotations of origin and popular acceptance as a material, but in the Tasmanian context it is a rare, strong stone, which does not overpower the piece with its decorative presence...
Concerning the making of the piece, it involves raising and hollow-fabrication; stone-cutting and setting; texturing and polishing and gilding; leveling and truing; and silver- and gold-soldering of disparate metals of different colours and karats together; not necessarily in that order; some of it is quite demanding, the difference in scale ranging from 1mm to 115mm (the thickness of the vessel itself is a paper-thin 0.5mm) and constant concentration is a given, so as not to ruin days of work by mishap...
I shall be making a special bespoke case for the routine storage and shipping of this object.
You'll note that I've 'quarantined' the price, based on the number 40, including the similarly reasoned GST amount of $400, although you would be wise to insure it for considerably more than that, but I'm keeping the piece accessible in price to ensure cash flow and the continuation of the business...
Thankyou.

The Artist

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Phill Mason - The Education 

Having been born and raised in Sydney, Phill ultimately wanted to attend the University of Sydney. In pre-Whitlam 1969, when"going to uni" was expensive, such an ambition meant having money or backing. Without a well-off family behind him, Phill had to study evenings for the first year, whilst working in the trenches of the Metropolitan Water, Sewerage and Drainage Board during the days.

Phill graduated from these trenches to the tunnels of the Snowy Mountains Authority Hydro-Electric Scheme for most of 1970, assisting welders at the Tumut III Power Station site near Talbingo. These experiences with the intersecting of pipes would become signatures of Phill's work in jewellery in the future. Full-time studies in Fine Arts commenced in 1971, in an unlikely combination with reading Honours Geography.

The three years of Fine Arts was a theoretical course undertaken through the Power Institute of the University of Sydney, which went on to become the basis of the Museum of Contemporary Art between Circular Quay and The Rocks in Sydney. Phill in 1970 in the Snowy Mtns.

Sports cars were always in the blood, but he's moved on: from red to white... So, studying Art was not a practical, hands-on training, but rather, an understanding of aesthetics and the history of art, as they applied to painting, sculpture, architecture and film.

Phill was privileged in those years to have lecturers of the eminence of Bernard Smith and Donald Brook, and Terry Smith as a tutor.

 

PREPARATION AND REPARATION

THE TRAINING


As a metalsmith, jeweller, lapidary, and stone facetor, Phill is self-taught. Of course, there were many helpful people and books along the way; but as a jeweller, he has had no formal training.

Phill did not become a jeweller until the age of thrity three, after having been a teacher, and a restauranteur. His childhood love of rocks, and his high school enjoyment of metalwork, were both repressed by Ambition. But they ripened darkly and eventually flowered in mature adulthood, leaving Phill, by then with adult obligations, with no choice but to undertake daily exercises in silver soldering and fabrication, if he was to become a jeweller.

Using Australiana gumleaf as a design vehicle, Phill drove his skills to the point where they could be relied upon, and in 1985 re-hung his shingle, in Salamanca Place, Hobart, as a studio jeweller...

The beauty of being self-taught  was that Phill was not taught "what can't be done";  and learning a little later than training is usually undertaken, meant that by then he brought some small richness of experience to bear. In other words, he found he had something to say, and was able to develop his own way of saying it.

WORKSHOPPING THE WAY


Along the way, Phill has been fortunate to take part in a number of workshops, given by notable jewellers, mainly under the auspices of the Jewellers and Metalsmiths Group of Australia.

These workshops have included 'Low-Tech techniques' at SH800 Workshop, Java; 'Exploration of Form and Metal Patination', with Michael Rowe; 'Fold-Forming' techniques, with Charles Lewton-Brain; 'Japanese Metalworking' techniques, with Hiroko and Gene Pijanowski; Enamelling, with Jamie Bennet; 'Gold Leafing and Cold-Joining ' techniques, with Bruce Metcalf; and Case-Making, with Penny Carey-Wells.

Phill's four exercises in the exploration of form and patination, a result of the Workshop under Mchael Rowe, covered in Craft Tasmania magazine 1986. "When does an arrangement of elements become a container? The patination is contained in the abstracted base of a 'can'..."

 

Phill was also fortunate enough to be able to occupy a studio-residency at Lakeside, Michigan, together with Carlier Makigawa, in 1992. This experience enabled him to play with scale, and fabricate pieces of two metres length.

GIVING BACK


It is important to give back to the society that nurtures you.

Phill has made himself available  to serve a number of organisations, which were important to his craft, in an honorary capacity (ie without pay or gain).

These have included ten years on the Board of the Salamanca Arts Centre (1986-96), with the last four of those serving as President, and representative on the State Government Oversighting Committee; President of the Crafts Council of Tasmania, and vice-President of the Crafts Council of Australia; National Chair of the Jewellers and Metalsmiths Group of Australia, and Convenor of the International Conference of the JMGA in Hobart, 1997

Phill has also taught Jewellery Fabrication in the Hobart TAFE for a half-decade in the late 'eighties, and continues to teach Gemmology in the Hobart Gemmological Association of Australia.

In 1989-90 Phill was also responsible for a Trainee (Ms Jan Barker); and from 1995 Phill undertook the responsibilities of apprenticing his son, Tyrus.

The Studio

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The Lapidary

 

Both Phill and Ty have a deep and abiding fondness for stone. Perhaps it comes from bearing the name 'Mason'...

Phill first joined a lapidary club - the Parramatta Lapidary Club - in 1965, and has been a member of such a club ever since. He remembers in those early days of easy pickings, club members driving direct from Agate Creek, Far North Queensland, back down to Sydney towing a trailer overloaded with world-class agates, directly to the club rooms in time for the monthly meeting, just to awe everyone. And it was awesome in those days when fine stones could be picked from the surface of the earth without digging...

Phill casting harsh shadows, deep digging at Agate Creek, Queensland, 2004

Agate Creek has been visited by Phill and Ty since, but it now involves deep digging in the tropical heat.

Petrifactions attract Ty more than agates. He collects the rare petrified manferns (Osmandacaulis) that occur in Southern Tasmania at Lune River. In contrast to the conditions at Agate Creek, digging manfern can be muddy, wet and cold.

Phill retrieves a chunk of petrified wood from Lune River, Tasmania.

Travelling overseas every year, Phill has seized opportunities to source interesting stone, and maintains a stockpile or rough which varies from opal to chrysoprase, and about a ton of his first lapidary love - agate.

Finessing the cutting of stone, and innovation in its setting,  is a pursuit of Masons. Rather than simply cutting cabochons - smooth, round-topped shapes - Phill prefers tablets and columns; and Ty prefers stone-carving. Ty was awarded third prize in the international Opal Jewellery Design Awards, 2002, held at Lightning Ridge every two years, for an innovative opal carving and setting.

'Charging the Storm': Ty's articulated opal carving brooch.

 

At the Bench

Because Phill and Ty work before the public, they must restrict their use of machinery, and largely confine their efforts to working by hand at the bench. Fortunately, this suits their interest, which is hand-fabrication, rather than mass production; so, very little use of machinery is called for, anyway.

Phill fabricating at the bench, 1994, before apprenticing son, Tyrus.

The workshop is small and tightly organised, like a refined kitchen, with the wet area, the dust-extracted polisher, and the acid bath all within easy reach, and set before the shop window which separates the workshop from the public. This layout allows viewers to easily follow each stage of the making of a piece, without being able to interrupt the process.

Phill and Ty have a policy of not interacting with the spectators, who are standing facing them, only a meter or two away on the other side of the glass. Rather, they concentrate on the job at hand, absorbed in the process. Once someone has entered the display area, then they are able to engage with them from the side of the workshop.

Apart from the sounds of filing or sawing, or the quiet hiss of the oxy-propane torch during gold soldering, the background is radio music from ABC's Classic FM.

Frequently, however, the peace is broken by laughter and banter between Phill and Ty, as they exercise their keen appreciation of the absurd...

Away from the Bench

Heavier, hotter, or dirtier work than is advisable to perform before the public, is undertaken at workshops away from the studio. This will include tasks as varied as pouring ingots from crucibles, through to swaging or raising hollow-ware, to lapidary processes.

Teaching sometimes takes both Phill and Ty to other benches. Because Phill is a qualified gemmologist, being a Fellow of the Gemmological Association of Australia, he teaches gemmology under the auspices of the Association on occasion. He also taught jewellery design and fabrication in the Hobart College of Technical and Further Education (TAFE) for five years in the late 'eighties.

Tyrus taught silversmithing for a similar period at the Hobart Lapidary Association.

Benchmarks...

A sometimes overlooked reason to be away from the bench is the need to refresh the soul. Often this takes the form of fossicking in the bush and digging agates or the rare petrified manfern of Tasmania. In the summer it is a ritual to seive for sapphires in the abandoned tin mining areas of the North East.

This January (2006, Southern Hemisphere Summer) Tyrus found a sapphire of over 6 carats worth cutting; his biggest yet. [Phill faceted the best sapphire that he has found so far, and Ty set it in a ring he made, for a jointly-given birthday present to daughter/sister Bronte.]

The need to get away and 'wash the eyes' sometimes requires an even bigger break. At such times may be needed a visit to Antarctica; or to seek out an active volcano in Java; or simply to go SCUBA diving in the Great Barrier Reef...

Phill passes an enourmous caverned iceberg on the way to Antarctica aboard the 'Icebird', 1993

Faceting the Stones

Phill facets all the major stones used in Masons studio jewellery. This is considered unusual for a goldsmith to do, and has several advantages, which give leverage to the pieces Masons make, compared to other makers.

Firstly, the scarcer gem rough can be sourced and imported directly from the mine. This allows Masons to sidestep the usual fare offered by wholesalers to jewellers. Phill travels overseas annually to maintain contacts, and then regularly imports such seldom seen stones as colour-change and green garnets, and blue tourmalines, or even more common stones of uncommon clarity, including facetable moonstone and opal.

The second advantage of Phill faceting the stones is that the larger sizes can more frequently be gleaned, and more economically, in the rough, than already cut.

   20 carat green garnet rough, dopped ready for cutting 

Thirdly, more satisfying cutting designs can be used. Even with the traditional cuts, the number of facets can be maximised, increasing scintillation; whereas many professional cutters cut only the minimum number of facets, and still consider the job done...

                                                          The 5.85 carat gem cut from the above rough, and set as a ring.                             

Moreover, new cutting styles can be employed, producing gems which, for instance, show the appearance of checkers in the stone, or other visual illusions.

And, best of all, stones can be cut in Masons own designs. Phill has developed new styles of cutting, using computer aided design (CAD), resulting, for example, in the Quilt Cut Designs and the Cupola Designs

 One of Phill's 'Cupola' facetting designs, developed 2004

Phill uses an Imahashi faceting machine, and has two: one in the Studio, and another at home. Such is the accuracy of these machines, that Phill can commence a stone at the Studio, take the faceting head home, and finish the stone on that machine...

In the Studio, Phill facets right in the exhibition area, amidst the public browsing through the display. People love to watch, and are generally somewhat awed into respectful observance by the obvious concentration needed. And it's great to share the creative process... 

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