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Object Timeline
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2016 |
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2025 |
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Brooch
This is a Brooch. It was designed by Ritsuko Ogura. It is dated 2005 and we acquired it in 2016. Its medium is rolled, pasted, and cut corrugated cardboard, silver. It is a part of the Product Design and Decorative Arts department.
Ogura uses disposable packing cardboard from which she carefully cuts cross-sections to enliven the textures, emphasizing that the appeal of this brooch stems solely from her manipulations of the humble material.
This object was
donated by
Susan Lewin.
It is credited The Susan Grant Lewin Collection, Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum.
- Easy Edges Lounge Chair
- cut corrugated cardboard, masonite.
- Gift of William Woolfenden.
- 1988-79-2
- Bubbles Chaise Longue
- layered and bent corrugated cardboard.
- Museum purchase from the Members' Acquisitions Fund of Cooper-Hewitt,....
- 2012-3-1
- Three-dimensional Model, Trojan Doghouse, 1990
- laser-printed inks on cardboard, cut, taped and assembled, with applied....
- Gift of Lewis Davis.
- 1991-16-1
Our curators have highlighted 3 objects that are related to this one.
- Print, The News That's Never Read
- offset lithograph on off-white paper.
- Museum purchase with funding provided by the Buddy Taub Foundation, Dennis A.....
- 2016-54-38
- Print, Destiny of an Old Directory
- offset lithograph on glossy white paper.
- Museum purchase with funding provided by the Buddy Taub Foundation, Dennis A.....
- 2016-54-47
- Grasshopper Ottoman
- plywood, wool upholstery.
- Gift of Mel Byars.
- 1991-59-60
Its dimensions are
H x W x D: 8.9 × 10.2 ×9.2 cm (3 1/2 × 4 × 3 5/8 in.)
It has the following markings
Mark on inside, stamped on silver support - cipher within a circle/ SILVER / JAPAN / unnown stamp.
Cite this object as
Brooch; Designed by Ritsuko Ogura (Japanese, b. 1951); rolled, pasted, and cut corrugated cardboard, silver; H x W x D: 8.9 × 10.2 ×9.2 cm (3 1/2 × 4 × 3 5/8 in.); The Susan Grant Lewin Collection, Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum; 2016-34-80-a
This object was previously on display as a part of the exhibition Jewelry of Ideas: Gifts from the Susan Grant Lewin Collection.