James Lynn

About me:

As a child of an Air Force family, I got moved around a lot. Though I was born in Biloxi, Mississippi, I left at age 2. After that it was Scotland, Texas, DC, and Texas again, until I left home. I still didn’t settle down for a long time, but eventually I made it back to Texas, where my wife Jo Ann and I built an unconventional house (with a Big Workshop!) in the woods of the Hill Country. We share the house with two cats, and the woods with a lot of deer, birds, and assorted other wildlife.

I began doing leatherwork back in 1968--that’s right, ’68!--and in 1974 I started working in precious metals. I am self-taught, and still learning after over thirty years. Most of my career has been in custom jewelry work. Wedding rings, especially mokume gane rings, have always been the most frequently requested items, but sometimes my clients present me with unique challenges. These give me the opportunity to continually learn or invent new techniques, which I love to do.

About 15 years ago, I was asked by Austin Community College to start up a jewelry education program in connection with their Art Metals, Blacksmithing, and Welding programs. I continue to teach there as a full-time professor. I’m sure I’ve learned as much by teaching as I ever did at the bench, and it has become a major focus and an absolute necessity in my life.

I’m really proud of my Master Bench Jeweler Certification from the Jewelers of America (www.jewelers.org). There are well over 100 of us now (as of 2008), of which I was the 72nd. Their certification program is based on rigorous skill testing at the workbench, and the Master Level was the toughest test I ever had to take. (To see my test pieces, click here.)

I also have long-standing interests in metal sculpture, blacksmithing, and hand raising of vessels; as well as drumming, photography, backpacking, and science, especially astronomy.

About my work:

This is hard for me to write about, as I’ve always believed that an artist’s work should speak for itself, without need of explanation. But still, there is an expectation on the part of an audience that the artist should express some of the motivations and principles underlying the work, so here follows my attempt.

My world-view is both spiritual and scientific, aesthetic and technical. Although our culture often places these values in contention, I see them as different ways to appreciate reality--a reality that becomes more mysterious and beautiful the more one knows about it, rewarding endless fascination with endless wonder. It is this mystery and wonder that I attempt to hint at in some way in my designs. It is the challenge.

We have jewelry in our museums that was made hundreds, even thousands of years ago. Looking at these treasures, you can see the traces of a living hand and mind, perfectly transmitted through time, as personal as a touch. You can sense the maker, the giver, the wearer, the culture around them. I think about that whenever I make a piece; that it might touch hands and eyes unimaginably far away in time. I think it’s really cool.

Every artist has influences, and among mine are Art Nouveau, as exemplified by the work of Georges Fouquet, René Lalique, Alfonse Mucha, et al; Celtic design, especially the knotwork; and Art Deco. Of course, the contemporary design environment in which we live today also plays a role, and above all, I observe nature.

All my jewelry is functional, in the sense that it is made to be worn and not just looked at.

I am what is called in jewelry terms a “fabricator,” that is, I work directly with the metal, rather than casting it in a mold, so each piece is individually handmade. Since my interest is in the metalwork, I tend to use stones in a subordinate role, not as the main focus of interest.

Incidentally, for the past few years I have chosen, when diamonds are called for, to work only with heirloom stones or those that are guaranteed not to be conflict diamonds . (If you don’t know what those are, please take a moment to follow the link.) The diamond industry has cleaned up its act considerably in the last few years, and I now have reliable sources for conflict-free diamonds.I’m also investigating ways of obtaining gold and other gemstones that are extracted in an environmentally benign manner. Your feedback on this topic is always appreciated.

Making unusual pieces is very stimulating, but I still enjoy doing wedding rings. In our culture, wedding rings are sometimes the only really fine jewelry that non-“jewelry people” ever wear, so it’s very satisfying to be able to provide something that is out of the ordinary, and that has personal meaning for them.

In the summer of 2008 I took a course in Computer-Aided Design and Manufacturing for Jewelry. It’s an exciting emerging field; fun for me, because it’s like a jeweler’s video game. CAD jewelry will not be displacing handmade anytime soon, if ever, but the process is useful for making items that must be geometrically precise.

Custom work calls for a special skill that I enjoy practicing, the art of communicating with clients to form an image of their desired piece of jewelry, while simultaneously expressing my own aesthetic. Experience has shown that the clients who allow me the greatest artistic freedom are those who most often get just what they want. And there’s mystery for you.

“Spiritual and scientific, aesthetic and technical. Mokume hints at the mystery and wonder of our complex reality...”

~ James Lynn