I’ve recently become enamoured of the work of Norman Grant, a Scottish silversmith (and occasionally goldsmith) who produced gorgeous work from the late 1960s to the late 1970s. Grant used enamel beautifully; he also favoured organic shapes such as bubbles, circles and peacock feather-like details. Apparently he drew a lot of his inspiration from the nature he observed around him. His use of colour was beautiful too – he favoured mainly blues and purples, but also reds, oranges, ochres and browns.
There are several designs of his which I particularly love. The first is his ‘bubble’ jewellery, featuring open circles of silver, sometimes arranged randomly and sometimes like the petals of a flower.
The second is a development of the bubble jewellery, but which features a peacock feather-like motif. The terminal heart-shaped motif has also been used on its own in his jewellery designs, and is described as a lily-pad.
He also made many pieces in what could loosely be described as an Art Nouveau style, often with blowsy floral and botanical motifs:
as well as scenes of local Scottish life:
He also made nature-based pieces in a more modern style:
and more modernist, abstract pieces:
After Grant retired from jewellery making to work for De Beers in London in the early 1980s, but his company, Dust Jewellery, continued making jewellery into the 1990s.
There are a couple of good articles online about Grant which are well illustrated and well worth a read:
http://www.modernsilver.com/normangrant.htm
https://www.modernvintagestyle.co.uk/blog-section/about-norman-grant-jewellery
Thank you for your post! I am falling for his work as well. I have a silver pendant of his date stamped 1958. It is a floral in dark reds and burnt orange. Enjoyed your photos as well. Heading over to your shop. Best wishes for joy and good health in 2019.
Ooh that sounds lovely Carol – glad to meet a fellow fan. I love his use of colour and his vibrancy. Clever chap!
My dad was at art school at the same time as a Norman Grant and was lucky enough to get some of his early pieces.
How lucky! I think Norman’s work is so fantastic, and it must be fascinating to see his early work and how it developed.
I love Norman Grants work and have decided to collect it. I’ve just bought my first piece from EBay but it doesn’t have his stamp on it although looks genuine. Did he sometimes omit to stamp it? Hope you don’t mind me asking. I will keep an eye out for the stuff you are selling.
Hello Una,
Have fun collecting – his work is so vibrant and colourful and fun! I have to admit I don’t know if he always signed his pieces with the ‘NG’ mark. Certainly all those I have sold/have for sale at the moment were marked with it. He later started up Dust Jewellery so sometimes his pieces have ‘DJ’ on them. Sorry I couldn’t be of more help!
Best wishes with the collecting!