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15/03/2025 - 15/06/2025

Warwick Freeman Hook Hand Heart Star

About the exhibition

Warwick Freeman’s emblematic jewelry pursues meaning. Across five decades the New Zealand jeweller has built a lexicon of signs: from the cultural symbolism of the hook and the star to the heart redrawn in the volcanic scoria of Rangitoto island.  When worn, his jewelry communicates something of who we are and how we have lived. Throughout his career Freeman has never tired of exploring what it means to make jewelry in Aotearoa New Zealand.

Freeman’s work reflects a depth of thinking about the construction of identity that weaves together the big with the small. He has explored forms found in the detritus of daily life, the influence of New Zealand’s colonization, and the rich geology of the land, all of which have provided him with an abundant supply of materials and narratives to draw from.

Hook Hand Heart Star includes key installation works, emblematic groupings and a number of suites of emblems, described by Freeman as Sentences. Composed of arrangements of individual works, these groupings evidence Freeman’s practice as always in motion, building on itself iteratively over many years.

The four nouns that form the title of this exhibition are inspired by Freeman’s first stand-alone grouping of emblems from 1987, the four-piece ‘poem’, Fern Fish Feather Rose. This significant work catalyzed Freeman’s thinking about the power of assembling recognizable forms that could communicate their stories in lieu of words.

Warwick Freeman
Brooches “White Ghost”, “Orange Ghost“, “Green Ghost“, 2003
Corian, steel
Courtesy Die Neue Sammlung – The Design Museum
Photo: Die Neue Sammlung (Alexander Laurenzo)
Warwick Freeman
Pendant “Cutter“, 2010
H. 5 cm, w. 10 cm
Jaspis, Polyester strap
Courtesy Die Neue Sammlung – The Design Museum
Photo: Die Neue Sammlung (Alexander Laurenzo)

‘Warwick Freeman is one of the most influential contemporary jewellers of our time. His forthcoming survey exhibition at Die Neue Sammlung – The Design Museum, Munich, heralds a first for a jeweller from Aotearoa New Zealand. Hook Hand Heart Star is an extraordinary achievement that acknowledges Freeman’s international standing as a preeminent practitioner working in his field today.’                                                                                       (Kim Paton, Director, Objectspace)

About Warwick Freeman

Warwick Freeman (b.1953, Nelson) began making jewellery in 1972. As a prominent member of Auckland Jewellery Co-operative, Fingers, he was at the forefront of a rethinking of New Zealand contemporary jewellery practice that began in the 1980s. He has exhibited internationally since that time. In 2002 he was made a Laureate by the Francoise van den Bosch Foundation based at the Stedelijk Museum. In the same year Freeman received a laureate award from the Arts Foundation of New Zealand. In 2014, Freeman co-curated the exhibition Wunderrūma, with jeweller, Karl Fritsch. Wunderrūma was presented at Galerie Handwerk in Munich, and on its return to New Zealand at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki.

Freeman has also been involved in governance and curatorial activities: in 2004 he became the inaugural Chair of Objectspace, a public gallery dedicated to the exhibition of craft, design and architecture. His works are held in public and private collections in New Zealand and internationally including the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, the V&A, London, the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, LACMA, Los Angeles, the Houston Museum of Fine Arts and Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam.

Warwick Freeman, photograph by Sam Hartnett, courtesy of Objectspace

Selected works

Warwick Freeman
Brooches ”Flower Star“, 1992 , ”Hard Star“ and ”Soft Star“, 1991 Bailer Shell, Jaspis, gold, stainles steel, mother of Pearl
Warwick Freeman
Pendant “Arrow Hook”, 2008 fine gold, polyester cord
Warwick Freeman
Brooches “Fern Fish Feather Rose”, 1987 Silver
Warwick Freeman
Pendant “Handbird”, 2019, 4 & 5,8 x 11 x 7 cm
Warwick Freeman
The Seven Sisters, 2013

Curated in close collaboration by Warwick Freeman, Kim Paton, Director, Objectspace, Dr. Bronwyn Lloyd, Curator, Objectspace, and Dr. Petra Hölscher, Senior Conservator, Die Neue Sammlung- The design Museum

We thank for generous support
Creative New Zealand
Museumsstiftung zur Förderung der Staatlichen Bayerischen Museen - Vermächtnis Christof und Ursula Engelhorn
The Stout Trust, New Zealand

Further exhibition locations:
December 2025: Objectspace in Auckland, Aotearoa New Zealand
July 2026: The Dowse Art Museum in Wellington, Aotearoa New Zealand

A richly illustrated publication will be published by arnoldsche Art Publishers, Stuttgart, designed by Inhouse, Auckland, Aotearoa/New Zealand

The exhibition on the 2nd floor is barrier-free. We recommend that people with visual impairments come with an accompanying person.

There is a tour in German and easy-to-understand language (accessible via the Pinakothek der Moderne app)

Planning your visit

Open today till 6.00 pm

Eine Uhr, die die Zeit anzeigt

Opening Hours

Daily 10.00 – 18.00
Thursday 10.00 – 20.00
Monday closed

Ein Symbol, das den Standort anzeigt

Location

Pinakothek der Moderne
Barer Straße 40
80333 München
Ein Symbol mit dem Buchstaben "i" innerhalb eines Kreises

Further visitor information

More information about your visit
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