Showing posts with label treasure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label treasure. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Hoards: The Hidden History

I have always loved the idea of buried treasure, The thrill that must go with uncovering something not seen in such a long time, the mystery as to why they were never recovered and of course jewels, antiquities and coins!!!
So when I found out that The British Museum had a exhibition titled - Hoards: the hidden history of ancient Britain, I decided that I really should go especially since it ends in less then a week!

The British Museum
A hoard in its broadest sense is a group of items kept together, and hoards from the past are either deliberately discarded or ultimately lost.

One of the displays I was particularly looking forward to seeing was The Frome hoard, I had come upon an article about the discovery a while ago and was rather excited to get to see it in person....

The Frome Hoard
The Frome Hoard was found in April 2010 by metal detectorist Dave Crisp in Frome, Somerset. The hoard consists of 52,503 Roman bronze and base silver third century coins commonly known as radiates and is the biggest hoard ever discovered in a single vessel in Britain.

Coins From the Frome Hoard
The hoard also boasts the largest group of coins of the British Emperor Carausisus that have been found together and a group of five very rare Carausisus silver denarii (seen above). Oh think of all the things I could do with those lovely coins!

One of the most interesting aspects of the exhibition is the way that they explored the reason behind why the hoards were buried, I had never put much thought into this side of things and had always just assumed things were buried for safe keeping and then lost/forgotten.
It is thought though that due to the location of the Frome Hoard was found, the quantity of low value coins and the fact that the pot was too fragile to be lifted out of the ground once filled with those coins (as well as other reasons) that it may have been a ritual offering made by the community.

Other hoards thought to be ritual offerings from the display include....

Miniature Shields from the Salisbury Hoard
One of the largest hoards of prehistoric metal objects found in Britain, The Salisbury Hoard, near Netherhampton, Wiltshire, was found in the 1980's. The items found were dug up with out the land owners permission or knowledge and sold illegally to a dealer who then sold on many of the items. When it came to light that a large amount of artefacts with out any provenance had come onto the antiques market people started to look for the culprits, four years later they were caught and charged with Theft.

The hoard consisted of over 600 objects, with a mix of Bronze Age metal work and iron age model weapons including 24 miniature shields, 46 model cauldrons (as shown in the photos above and below), 173 socked axes and a variety of tools such as knives, chisels, punches, a hammer and anvil.

Model Cauldrons from the Salisbury Hoard
Then there are founders hoards where the value is in the raw material rather then their face value and the metal for example may have been put aside for recycling.

Vessel from the Water Newton Hoard, Cambridgeshire
The Water Newton hoard found in 1974 contained 30 gold coins dating from AD 337 to 350 inside a leather purse at the bottom of a bronze vessel that was inside a ceramic bowl with weighed amounts of folded up pieces of silver sheet (which were once a bowl and vessel) on top of the purse. The weights of the silver pieces are significant (321g and 642g) weighing one and two Roman pounds in weight.

Purse hoards (accidental losses)

Replica of a money bag
While this Replica (very cool 3D print out) of a money bag from the Beau Street hoard before it was cleaned and separated, is not really a purse hoard (not a small accidental loss as there were 8 bags) it shows what a purse hoard would look like (on a larger scale) if you managed to dig it up intact! Traces of the leather bag that held the coins could be found on the outer most coins as a powder. Then there are Emergency hoards hidden in times of conflict and economic insecurity or spoils of war or proceeds of theft.
Hoard From Near Milton Keynes
This hoard from near Milton Keynes contains the raw materials for forging coins. The three vessels contain bronze pellets, hammered metal discs used to make coin blanks and coin blanks ready for striking with the design, there is also an upper and lower coin die. It is thought that the hoard was hidden to avoid the authorities discovering that the owner of these items was illegally forging coins.

Lastly there are also Grave goods, generally items placed in graves are not considered to be hoards but this tends to be a grey area as human bodies can completely decompose leaving no trace only the items buried with them.

I have always been really inspired by hidden treasures and ancient coins and hope that I will continue to be inspired, here are a few of my designs containing ancient items or inspired by treasure....

Collection of treasure jewellery
Top right 1641 coin with ceramic dagger by P......, top left Treasures necklace with old coin, polymer heart by the fab Rebekah of Tree Wing Studio and lamp work by the wonderful Genea of Genea Beads, bottom right treasure coin locket and bottom left ancient split Djenne Bead set studs.

I do know I could never part with any of my treasured bead hoard, could you?


Sunday, January 31, 2016

Buried Treasure - the "Use your stash" reveal!




Treasures inside, savvy? 
Welcome!
The first reveal of 2016! 

We all unearthed treasures in our hoards, stashes, treasure troves, inventories... now its time to see what wonder we have created. Please join us and out guests this month. 

AJE team:


Guests: 




Tuesday, December 29, 2015

January challenge: Buried Treasure

Buried Treasure aka "Use your stash!"

Dig into the treasure you have been hoarding... 

We all have one. Call it a treasure, or a bead stash. Call it loot or inventory. It most likely does NOT look like this: 

Keeping your beads safe? Paranoid? 

It probably looks more like this: 

ONE of my 4 artist bead treasure boxes. Can you spot all the pieces by AJE team mates? LOL
What could be better than starting the year off right with new creative ideas? Using a treasures bead or component! Last year we started what may become a tradition here at Art Jewelry Elements - the "Use your Stash" challenge. (Granted, thats not a very poetic name, but it gets right to the point.)

Here is how it works: 

  • Gather your beads and components by any and all of your favorite artisan bead makers. 
  • Fondle. Think. Plan. Design. Dream. 
  • Create! 
  • Sign up here! Leave a comment with your name AND your blog address. 
  • Blog! Buried treasure reveal date is January 31st 2016. 
**Please — only leave a comment if you can commit to creating a finished piece and blogging about it on the reveal date.
**Pull out those pieces you love from your stash and ENJOY them. What are you saving them for? 
** This Buried Treasure challenge is NOT limited to AJE artists - but we DO love you see what you create with our creations. 

Until then - Happy Holidays! Happy New Year! Happy Creating!


Monday, December 15, 2014

January Component of the Month - from the vaults? Use your stash!

Do you ever sit in your bead room and look over the treasure, hoard, art beads you have collected? Do you love them, fondle them, call them Precious? Gorgeous miniature works of art that you needed to have, even though you weren't sure how you were going to use them in a finished piece...

Then this is the COM challenge for you! 


Harry, Ron, Hermione in Bellatrix's vault at Gringott's 
Does your studio, bead room, dining room table, work space look like Bellatrix LeStrange's vault? Piled high with treasure, and avalanche if you touch the wrong stack? 

This past August, after Beadfest, Jennifer and Lesley were at my house and we were trading a few last beads before they had to leave.  The idea was tossed out that we do a one-of-a-kind Component of the Month challenge where we USE OUR STASH! Pull out a piece we had been holding on to, a treasure created by one of our AJE team mates... and put it to creative use. Brilliant!


So for January we are challenging each other in a new way: AJE members will use an art bead/component in a finished piece; an art bead/component created by any one of their team mates. This diverse array of work will be blogged on the reveal date of January 31st, 2015.

And for you? Our loyal readers have more chances to win! There are 8 members, each contributing pieces/prizes. How to win? Leave a comment ( and email) below,. you know the drill!  And we encourage our fellow bead hoarders, collectors, art bead aficionados to create along with us. Even if you don't win one of these featured pieces - raid your stash! Delve into your treasure and create using an art bead by any AJE member.

You could win one of these: 

Top: Sue Kennedy, Lindsay Starr, Jen Cameron. Center: Caroline Dewison.
Bottom: Lesley Watt, Melissa Meman, Kristen Stevens. 
Winter snowflake: Linda Landig
Bonus: because I couldn't decide between these two wintery options. 



If you would like to play, here are the rules…

  • The AJE team will give away the components pictured above to 9 winners; selected randomly from those who leave comments below this post. Your comment must include your EMAIL address so we can contact you should you win.
  • Which piece are you winning from the picture above? Let us surprise you! 
  • Please — only leave a comment if you can commit to creating a finished piece and blogging about it on the reveal date.
  • The names of the 9 winners will be announced on December 17, 2014.
  • This giveaway is open to US and international countries, but please be aware that international addresses will have longer postage times… sometimes up to 3 weeks.
  • The blog reveal will take place on January 31, 2015.




Friday, September 6, 2013

Freeform Friday: Trash to treasure

Trash to treasure. We all know the phrase. But for the last week its been my job.  I was trying to think of a topic for this post as all I have been doing is sorting, tossing, packaging, purging... Oh! That is the post!

My Dad is here, working on cleaning out my parents old house. As my parents are happily settled in new digs in Austin - its not a sad, heartbreaking experience... but the process is still exhausting mentally and physically, and a little depressing.  We have a dumpster... and we clearly know how to use it! (Picture was taken on Day 2 of 7!)

My brother ( on left) and husband ( on right ) surveying the territory. 
Clothes for vintage sales, clothes for Goodwill. Love letters from my maternal grandparents, nothing too racy as they were "courting" from 1917 to 1921! Cards drawn by my sisters and I for birthdays...moth eaten stuffed animals... so many memories to revisit, honor and then let go. 

But amidst the flotsam and jetsam there are treasures to be had!!! You know I am a mixed media artist and sometimes the strangest things spark an idea. Let me show you a few things I happily adopted this week:


1. Vintage clock keys - wire wrapped? Annealed, drilled? Necklace focal or shrine insert? 
2. Dutch (?) painted porcelain button - gabled house and ships beyond. Peyote stitch bezel? polymer?    Focal on a shrine exterior to draw you in? 
3. Vintage celluloid (early plastic) horse. I am thinking it was a Cracker Jack prize back in the day - before my time. Resin? Featured in a shadowbox pendant? 
4. Rhinestone bling - broken costume jewelry... Really - no idea. The magpie in me was drawn to the "shiny!"
1. Wee glass bottles ( above tins in top pix) - wire wrapped? Circular peyote around the neck? Corks? Contents? Those tins? Definitely shrine pendants. Altered, manipulated, and secret relics added inside... 
2. Id bracelet blank, vintage Mexican silver earring - My Mom saved one earring. Who knows the reason. Its stunning. 
3. Broken small pocket watch - no question here. I am just going to polish it and wear it on a long necklace with chunky gemstones!


Books! 
Derelict, dying, decrepit books. Old dictionaries, and foreign language texts are the best. Why? Words under resin! Lining a shrine interior! Text is a favorite of mine to incorporate into much of my work. 

Sorry to be brief - I hope you enjoyed seeing my finds... Its late here Thursday night - I look forward to a bit of down time this weekend (its been dialed up to 11 since before Beadfest) and then the studio next week! Stay tuned for more adventures... 
Brother - waving goodbye from way over there across the vista of detritus. 

Jenny 


www.jdaviesreazor.com