Françoise van den Bosch Award 1998
Swiss Federal Design Award 2007
Bernhard Schobinger is a Swiss contemporary artist jeweler.
Early life and education
Bernhard Schobinger attended the School of Applied Arts in Zürich for two years, followed by Goldsmith's apprenticeship between 1963 and 1967. In 1968, he opened a workshop-gallery in Richterswil and started to produce his own work.[1] In the 80s he spent periods of time in London, New York and Berlin.
Career and work
Throughout his career as an art jeweler, Schobinger has blurred the lines between applied and fine arts.[2] His esthetic echoes Concrete art mainly under the influence of Max Bill, Punk culture of the 70s, Italian arte povera and Neo-Dada.
Often playing with contrasts, Schobinger's single pieces are made of material which varies greatly from recycled objects and pieces inherited from his mother to precious metals and gemstones.[3][4]
Broken glasses, scissors or rusty material are used in a provocative way, making jewelry a means for a narrative on material culture.[5]
As the art historian Roger Fayet put it, "His works are based not on 'neither-nor' but rather on 'both... and', on juxtaposition and interpolation. What comes out of this is - despite all this use of rubbish - jewellery of extraordinary richness: rich in materials and forms, rich in qualities that are sensorily perceived and, most importantly, rich in meanings and wit".[6]
Schobinger has been invited as a visiting lecturer in a number of universities and academies, including the Royal College of Art in London, Hiko Mizuno College of Jewelry in Tokyo, the Rhode Island School of Design. the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam, the Haute Ecole d'Arts Appliqués in Geneva.
Awards
His work was rewarded with a number of awards. Most recently, in 2007, he received the Swiss Federal Design Award.
^Florian Hufnagl, Bernhard Schobinger: A Future-Orientated Jewellery Artist, in Roger Fayet and others, Bernhard Schobinger: Jewels Now!, Arnoldsche Art Publishers, Stuttgart 2003 ISBN978-3-89790-183-4
^Bijoux en jeux. Catalogue des collections du MUDAC et de la Confédération suisse. 2014, La Bibliothèque des Arts, ISBN978-2-88244-027-3
^Anne Dressen, Michèle Heuzé, Benjamin Lignel. Medusa. Bijoux et tabous. Paris Musées 2017, ISBN9782759603473