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Jewellery, 2000
Sterling silver, cornelian, 14k and 18k gold, rubies Lent by the artist
(Photo: Harry Foster © Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation)
" As for the jewellery, the ones I like to create resemble ancient amulets and
talismans. These are objects that have, as in antiquity, a sacred character, and are inspired by
traditional and symbolic motifs. "
Excerpt from a text by the artist
Of Turkish-Egyptian ancestry, Nihal Mazloum was born in Paris in 1951 and grew
up in Cairo, in an affluent and multilingual family. After receiving a Bachelor's
degree in anthropology from Cairo's American University, she left Egypt to study
ethnology in Paris. She remained there for seven years and then immigrated to Canada
in 1978. She lives in Montreal.
![Nihal Mazloum](/web/20061029113040im_/http://www.warmuseum.ca/cultur/cespays/images/pay2_14p3.jpg)
Nihal Mazloum,
Montreal, Quebec, 1999
Camille Zakharia
Iris digital prints
Collection of the Canadian Museum of Civilization
Now a jeweller and artisan, she has always been fascinated by metalwork. It was in
Paris that she decided to follow that direction, undergoing advanced training in
metalwork despite the disapproval of her mother, who was disappointed to see her adopt
a craft traditionally reserved for men. Transforming material . . . that's what
pleases me, as much as creating objects does. She opened a workshop in Montreal
and began to display her jewellery in 1979. It was in Montreal that she acquired most
of the techniques she now uses.
Brooch, 2000
Calligraphy: " In the name of God, the Lenient, the Merciful "
Sterling silver, 14k gold Lent by the artist
(Photo: Harry Foster © Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation)
She attributes a sort of sacred value to jewellery and draws her inspiration from
the motifs, symbols and myths of ancient cultures—Pharaonic, but also Greek, African
and, more generally, prehistoric. A piece of jewellery is not only an abstract object
that is beautiful. I craft it so as to give strength and power to the person who will
wear it, she explains.
Nihal Mazloum participates in various craft shows, as well as in exhibitions in Canada
and the United States, and sells her production in her workshop and in specialized stores.
Several of her jewellery pieces can be found in the Canadian Museum of Civilization's collection.
http://www.nihalmazloum.com/
nihalmazloum@videotron.ca
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