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Aranami Ring

£14,000
Description

Aranami — rough waves. The sea not in stillness but in force. Seen crashing across Chinese and Japanese woodblock prints, the wild wave is one of the most enduring images in East Asian visual tradition — not nature observed but nature at its most ungovernable, the moment before everything breaks. The ring takes this directly. The band twisted and surging, the gold building upward into a setting that crests around the stone like water around rock. At the centre, a 4.7 carat cushion-cut Sri Lankan sapphire — pooling colour rather than scattering it, holding the quality of water seen from depth rather than surface.


Lead time of 3-4 weeks.

Measurements

3 x 1.5 x 0.4 cm

Condition
New
Womens
US OS
Color
Gold
Seller
Eliz Fan

Eliz Fan explores the relationship between imagery, memory, and personal identity through jewellery — objects that accompany the body through time, holding emotional meaning and cultural memory in form and material. Of Taiwanese heritage, born and raised in Hong Kong, now based in London, Fan brings a lived experience of cultural intersection to her practice. Her Masters in Jewellery & Metal at the Royal College of Art refined a technical language precise enough to hold the weight of that history — work that is quiet in its execution, exacting in its intention. Central to this practice are philosophies rooted in East Asian thought: wabi-sabi, the appreciation of imperfection and transience, and ichigo ichie, the awareness that every moment is singular and unrepeatable. These ideas shape an approach to making that values the quiet, the incomplete, and the overlooked — worn surfaces, natural structures, the softness of things that resist resolution. Themes of calmness, solitude, vulnerability, and reflection run through the work. Each piece emerges from an attentiveness to small, raw beauties: the kind that exist beneath everyday life rather than above it. The practice also holds the meeting of East and West — where traditional Chinese and Japanese ornamental languages are drawn through personal perspective and lived experience. Historical patterns and dreamlike imagery are not reproduced but inhabited, allowed to exist in a contemporary and intimate context.

  • Contemporary
  • Japanese