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Catherine Mannheim
©Ricardo Cerolini
Catherine Mannheim
©Susanna Fyson
Catherine Mannheim
©Ricardo Cerolini
Catherine Mannheim
©Ricardo Cerolini
Catherine Mannheim
©Juliette Sheath
Catherine Mannheim
©Ricardo Cerolini

Catherine Mannheim

Jewellery maker

London, United Kingdom

Recommended by L’ÉCOLE, School of Jewelry Arts

Uniqueness in the details

  • Catherine makes silver and gold jewellery with different stones
  • A family friend inspired her to become a jeweller
  • She gives as much importance to the back of a piece as she does to its front

Since the 1960s, Catherine Mannheim has been making contemporary jewellery with traditional techniques and a unique combination of materials. "It all started with a family friend, a trained jeweller and silversmith in Germany who would make jewellery for my mother. They were nothing like the pieces I had seen in shops," she recalls. This is when young Catherine's curiosity peaked and she realised that jewellery was a craft of endless possibilities. Her first works were made in silver. She then started using gold and sourcing stones in different colours to complement her designs. Catherine's detailed pieces are built with movement. "What I make is one-of-a-kind. Each piece is special, once it is gone, it will never be available again," she says.

Catherine Mannheim is a master artisan: she began her career in 1966 and she started teaching in 1967.

INTERVIEW

After studying for five years in London, I had the great opportunity to study for one year at the Düsseldorf Werkkunstschule with Friederich Becker in the mid-1960s. The work of this influential goldsmith and jeweller has left an indelible mark on my work. His ideas guide and inspire me to this day.

It is essential. Design is not just an idea, it must be executed properly, in a practical way that works on the body. I care about the back of my pieces, I like them to be as well made as the front is. This way, when a piece is turned over, it is still immaculate.

Details matter in many ways. For instance, I care about how each section on a necklace joins with the next and how the setting of a stone in a ring fits perfectly in the shank. Even a 1 mm thickness can make all the difference to the look and feel of a piece!

I have always only wanted to make one-of-a-kind jewellery, not create a brand, which is why I have never wanted to make casts to repeat a design. Each piece has a life of its own – it is unique. This is what I would like my legacy to be, jewellery that will carry meaning in the years to come.