“La manilla tiene magia”

October 14, 2009

SEMANA: ¿Cómo terminó una diseñadora de joyas vinculada a la campaña para reconstruir El Salado?

MERCEDES SALAZAR: Al igual que la mayoría de colombianos, no conocía las atrocidades que los paramilitares habían cometido en esa población. Durante tres días mataron a 66 personas, hicieron una fiesta de sangre que cambió para siempre la vida de cientos de personas y dejó una huella en la historia nacional. Cuando me propusieron diseñar una manilla para recoger fondos para reconstruir el pueblo y las vidas de los sobrevivientes, no lo pensé un solo minuto.


September 22, 2009

Famous Japanese Fashion Designer

September 4, 2009

Famous Japanese Fashion Designer Keita Maruyama with Mercedes at his Tokyo boutique.


Bracelet for “El Salado” reconstruction

September 4, 2009

Buying this bracelet and your willingness in wearing it you´ll help "El Salado" population in the reconstruction of their environment, town and lifes.


JAPAN JEWELLERY FAIR 2009

August 31, 2009

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Mercedes Salazar will be on Japan Jewellery Fair 2009. Since CMP, organizer of the September Hong Kong Jewellery & Watch Fair and other leading jewellery events in Asia, assumed ownership of the Japan Jewellery Fair in 2006 the number of exhibitors and visitors has doubled. The fair is now the leading event in Japan for the second half of the year and in 2008 attracted 448 exhibitors from 22 countries and was attended by 15,968 quality buyers.

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Mercedes Salazar

August 13, 2009

We are awed by the lush, green surroundings of the José Celestino Mutis Botanical Garden in Bogotá, Colombia. Named for the famed Spanish scientist and botanist, the garden houses over 18,000 acres of indigenous flora such as the country’s largest aquatic Amazonian flower. With its serene landscaping of lakes and artificial waterfall, the garden serves as a conservatory that promotes environmental information and extensive research on the plants harboring its grounds. Colombia is also the home of jewelry designer, Mercedes Salazar.

Not unlike other jewelry artists, Salazar is unafraid to create jewelry on her terms, bringing innate knowledge and every form of inspiration to her lovely creations. She fearlessly explores unusual combinations like mixing alloy with fabric, integrating cut, colored glass with metal instead of semi-precious or precious gemstones, or fashioning a sea urchin shell into a 24-karat gold-covered pendant.

A graduate of Mexico City’s Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes’ Craftwork School, Salazar’s keen attention to contrasts–light with dark, high polish with texture, and combining different shapes and colors–is a focal point of her designs. Her pieces are elegant yet simultaneously bold and colorful, and she can take a conventional design making it her own.

Her array of materials include, among others, African beads, resin, 24-karat gold plating, satin thread, brass, and sterling silver. With some of her pendants featuring semi-precious gemstones, such as her Ainan Jade Pendant, Salazar adds a signature touch by accentuating the chain suspending the gemstone with three, smaller stones: ruby, garnet, and amethyst.

Firmly holding to the belief of a positive, higher realm, she uses her creative gifts to inspire and uplift. Widely seen as a symbol of death or evil, the skull motif also symbolizes life and consciousness. Salazar’s take on this symbol is beautifully distinctive. She fashions the skull from golden brass shaping it into a mask-like pendant, overlaying it with a printed pattern and adding dangling, white pearls within the eye areas. She also creates posie-type rings, and bracelet with uplifting, engraved messages.

Her bold colored, hand-woven Caña Flecha bracelets, made with satin thread and sterling silver clasps, pay homage to her Colombian roots and artisanship. In Colombia, the leaves of the Caña Flecha palm tree are used to create such items as handbags, hats, and baskets. Before the leaves are color-dyed and fashioned into these items, artisans dry them in the sun and the fibers are divided into different sized strips. Salazar’s vibrant yet refined pieces are sold around the world including Puerto Rico, Japan, Australia, the Dominican Republic, Spain, Mexico, and the United States.

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Mercedes Salazar Recognition Grows

August 13, 2009

http://www.blogcatalog.com/search.frame.php?term=mercedes+salazar&id=8e74a48c3cb4b3e69adc461ba9345ca5


Teen Vogue

July 14, 2009
Teen Vogue

Teen VogueTeen Vogue


JET-SET / Colombia / July 2009 / No. 169

July 10, 2009

mercedes salazar - jewelry

Mercedes Salazar - jewelry designer

Desde niña el tema de la moda ha sido de su interés, pero siempre con versatilidad, nada común  y corriente. De hecho de los 17  a los 22 años se vistió con la ropa que su mamá tenia guardada en el clóset, típica de los años 50, 60  y 70. Más adelante, ya con ese antecedente  como parametro, la joyera definió su propia imagen como se le conoce hoy, fresca, divertida, auténtica, muy Mercedes Salazar.

Cuenta  con la sensibilidad y el talento de combinar adecuadamente colores y texturas, y con el caracter que le permite arriesgar sin miedo alguno. El único que puede opinar acerca de cómo se ve es Diego Martinez, su marido y mejor asesor de imagen.  Los demás aprendieron a admirarla con todo y sus botas de charol y suela blanca, sus chaquetas de estilo militar, su tacones de mas de “10 centimetros de autoestima”, sus tonos rosados, naranjas y fucsias, y todo lo que consigue en almacenes o en mercados de las pulgas del mundo, a donde suele ir a escarbar para soñar que nació en otra época  y pasarla bien.


“My Enchanted Forest”

July 6, 2009

Inspired by memories of her childhood, the magical creatures who
come to life in the stories, and the textures of the forest.

Mercedes converts the metal into a canvas where she can draw all her
sensations, where her own version of an enchanted forest becomes a reality.

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