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Emma Bugg Concrete Jewellery, Hobart, Tasmania. 807 likes · 11 talking about this · 3 were here. Next show: @designedmadetas Dec 2019 and Handmark, Julne 2020Followers: 859
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-09-05/preserved-hamburger-made-into-brooch-by-tassie-jeweller/12625876
A Tasmanian jeweller made a brooch from a real hamburger four years ago and it still looks the same as when she made it. Emma Bugg normally works with concrete and silver but was inspired to work with fast food after attending a health retreat in 2015.
https://www.globuya.com/AU/Hobart/208960672451416/Emma-Bugg-Concrete-Jewellery
Samples from demolition sites are ground down and mixed with a mortar mix to create jewellery that carries a story, becoming a memento of a site that once existed. Emma Bugg is based in Hobart, Tasmania. She is always on the lookout for collaborative projects. If you have something to say, please contact Emma and every effort will be made to respond.
https://emmabugg.wordpress.com/author/emmabugg/
Emma Bugg finds inspiration for her jewellery in the urban environment. Architectural design and materials are a key element in Emma's work. Conceptually, she looks at the idea of holding on to memory of place, collecting pieced of discarded rubble from demolition sites and mixing the groung up remains through concrete and setting it her jewellery.
https://handmark.com.au/artist/emma-bugg/
Emma Bugg Jeweller. Artist bio; Latest work; Exhibitions; I enjoy challenging perceptions of a common material that is usually seen at an enormous scale. Since 2011, I have been exploring concrete as a material in jewellery. When scaled down to be worn on the body as a piece of jewellery, it is framed in a new context. My work often contains ...
https://emmabugg.wordpress.com/2011/03/06/hello-world/
Mar 06, 2011 · Emma Bugg finds inspiration for her jewellery in the urban environment. Architectural design and materials are a key element in Emma's work. Conceptually, she looks at the idea of holding on to memory of place, collecting pieced of discarded rubble from demolition sites and mixing the groung up remains through concrete and setting it her jewellery.
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