Origins & Legacy of Art Jewellery in South Africa

Timed Online Auction, 6 - 22 October 2025

Legacy
About the Session

Legacy, showcases 16 contemporary practitioners whose work reflects the movement’s enduring spirit of experimentation. Like their predecessors, these art jewellers often work with non-precious materials, producing pieces that are expressive, sculptural and conceptually adventurous.  Through these wearable artworks, the artists employ art jewellery as a critical medium to reflect upon, comment on, and challenge the world around them, exploring questions of identity, place, social standing, cultural practices, and political viewpoints.

 


Current Bid

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Lot 78
  • Mariambibi Khan 'Hijab Series III' brooch


Lot Estimate
ZAR 2 500 - 3 500
Current Bid
Starting at ZAR 2 500
Location
Cape Town
Delivery
Additional delivery charges apply
Shipping
Condition Report
May include additional detailed images
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About this Item

South Africa 1988-
Mariambibi Khan 'Hijab Series III' brooch
embroidered cotton and porcelain on a sterling silver frame with a sterling silver and steel brooch pin mechanism, length approximately 10cm, total weight 34 grams
2023

Notes

In my artistic practice, I work with textiles, cotton, and metal to reference my South African Indian heritage and the generations of skill passed down through embroidery, sewing, crocheting, and knitting. Drawing from my own experiences, I situate my creative jewellery practice within a South African Islamic feminist context, using familiar mediums such as paper, porcelain, and needlework to reflect the complex life stories of Muslim women. The pieces presented here are directly inspired by my surroundings and upbringing, which are deeply woven into multiple aspects of my identity. Crochet, in particular, connects me to inherited knowledge systems, while its translation into metal becomes a re-interpretation of this knowledge in my present state of being. The folded material, embroidery, and metal forms embody the interconnections of faith and identity. My first engagement with ideas surrounding faith and self often emerges intuitively, later unfolding into a more deliberate process of contemplation and discovery. Through the transformation of textiles into metal and vice versa, I reflect on identity as fluid and ever-changing, not fixed to one material, form, or technique, but instead woven together through lived experiences and memory.

-Mariambibi Khan

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