Her brush with jewellery designing is not something recent. She was a constant audience of her father’s design routine. ‘My father used to be a goldsmith, he used to create beautiful objects by hand, so I always observed him working while I was growing up. It was not until much later that I decided to become a jewellery designer, but coming from a line of goldsmiths definitely set me on a creative path.’
Born in São Paulo, Brazil, Silvia has always lived and worked there. The craftsmen who work on her pieces are all from Brazil and that is where the raw materials that go into crafting her beautiful jewellery come from too, ‘I end up finding a lot of the raw materials for my pieces here including an endless variety of precious multi-colored stones.’
The pieces are painted with brushes of just one or two squirrel-tail hairs, utilizing mineral-based pigments made of crushed gems such as blue lapis lazuli and green malachite, as well as yellow sulfur, black carbon and red iron oxide. Sculpted in silhouettes reminiscent of Mughal architectural elements, the works were then mounted into statement earrings with gemstones echoing the hues of the paints, including emeralds, rubies, sapphires, tourmalines, diamonds and South Sea pearls. Beyond the miniature pieces, other designs in the collection incorporate elements and materials inspired by India’s rich artistic heritage. Thin slabs of inlaid marble were transformed into earrings with precious stones and diamonds. Architectural details of Hindu temples were mimicked in carvings from rose quartz, rock crystal and green jade. Rudraksha beads, a talisman associated with the god Shiva, were used in necklaces and earrings.
Even the use of metals and gemstones are rather unpredictable in Silvia’s collections. Fire opal earrings from Ethiopia dazzle your eyes while soft corals form the silhouette of a Geisha ring vies for your attention. The allure of yellow gold is captured quite beautifully in one of her older collections, ‘Sun’, while she has espoused her admiration for Japanese Nestukes by mounting them on rings. But one thing that is evident is her love for colours. ‘I adore all kinds of stones – particularly emeralds, tourmalines and opals! Also, always colour, colour, colour.’
For collectors, Silvia’s repertoire of jewellery would be a paradise. It is also an interesting time for creators of fine jewellery, as pieces are picked up not just for their value, but also for the techniques used and the stories they tell. ‘I think high jewellery designers are looking increasingly into surprising their clients, creating things that involve extremely elevated forms of craftsmanship, as well as utilizing rare and unique stones and materials.’
After travelling the length and breadth of the world and paying tribute to so many countries by way of her jewellery, what is next in line for Silvia? ‘I am working right now on my Botanical collection, inspired by flora I found in my trip to the Amazon Rain Forest as well as from antique botanical prints found in Europe and Asia,’ she signs off.
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