Anti-Capitalism Rejected
Published: 09.03.2023
- Author:
- Loukia Richards
- Edited by:
- ZLR Betriebsimperium
- Edited at:
- Hamburg / Athens
- Edited on:
- 2023

Time, energy, and money invested in the study of their craft is the artists' capital.
This text is the Editorial published at SMCK Magazine. Issue #08. Rejected - Approved.
Good education, exciting travel, exquisite food, sophisticated sports equipment, rare books, nice clothes, unusual experiences, art, jewelry –objects and experiences that can be bought.
But jewelry is the art medium explicitly connected to wealth. Since antiquity, representatives of the ruling and spiritual classes wore special rings; kings and queens were buried with crowns encrusted with precious gems and other wearable treasures; talismans protected riches from the covetous ‘evil eye’. Even when contemporary jewelry challenges the notion of status, it still echoes – and contrasts – the ornament’s archetypical function.
Wealth, by definition, is neither ethical nor unethical.
Capitalism is the economic system dominating Western societies for the last four centuries; it is also euphemistically referred to as ‘the market’. It has shown remarkable resilience, though not necessarily fairness. Nevertheless, this school of thought produces wealth; the distribution of wealth to broader segments of society can cement and promote democracy more than an economy guided by a small unelected elite.
Being ‘anti-capitalist’ as a jewelry artist – the latest trend – is like shooting yourself in the foot. Communism never cared for jewelry and never had any use for ornaments or spirituality, another ancient heritage of jewelry.
The explosion in crafts was triggered by increased demand for comfort and luxury by the financially robust class of merchants, freelancers, intellectuals, bankers: the bourgeoisie that made its breakthrough in 17th-century Europe and imposed its taste as it changed the rules of the game. The ranks of the aristocracy and the Church had never been sufficiently numerous to absorb artists' and crafters' production and artists often had to wait a long time to be paid by the oligarchy – if they were paid at all. The new art-loving class, the middle class, ordered, bought, and paid – in cash.
Today contemporary jewelry’s most loyal customers are under attack: inflation, high taxation, high interest rates, looming unemployment even in highly sophisticated sectors, lockdown-related bankruptcies of small and medium enterprises, international instability due to the war in Ukraine, and luxury goods’ competition from technology products have affected them financially and emotionally.
What is the contemporary jewelry community's answer to this depressing situation? Anti-capitalism... Academics and jewelry theorists who rail against the markets and inculcate students to detest the market may not know how to explain its potential to young designers. The latter have invested time, energy, and money to study a craft – this is their capital. They should not neglect or negate it; on the contrary, they should reject mind-controlling and life-impoverishing ideologies and use their capital creatively to design their own professional success.
To celebrate Schmuck Munich 2023, SMCK Magazine offers all readers a free digital copy of issue no. 8.
Visit the website >>> here (www.smck.org/mag08.html) before 12 March to download your free copy.
But jewelry is the art medium explicitly connected to wealth. Since antiquity, representatives of the ruling and spiritual classes wore special rings; kings and queens were buried with crowns encrusted with precious gems and other wearable treasures; talismans protected riches from the covetous ‘evil eye’. Even when contemporary jewelry challenges the notion of status, it still echoes – and contrasts – the ornament’s archetypical function.
Wealth, by definition, is neither ethical nor unethical.
Capitalism is the economic system dominating Western societies for the last four centuries; it is also euphemistically referred to as ‘the market’. It has shown remarkable resilience, though not necessarily fairness. Nevertheless, this school of thought produces wealth; the distribution of wealth to broader segments of society can cement and promote democracy more than an economy guided by a small unelected elite.
Being ‘anti-capitalist’ as a jewelry artist – the latest trend – is like shooting yourself in the foot. Communism never cared for jewelry and never had any use for ornaments or spirituality, another ancient heritage of jewelry.
The explosion in crafts was triggered by increased demand for comfort and luxury by the financially robust class of merchants, freelancers, intellectuals, bankers: the bourgeoisie that made its breakthrough in 17th-century Europe and imposed its taste as it changed the rules of the game. The ranks of the aristocracy and the Church had never been sufficiently numerous to absorb artists' and crafters' production and artists often had to wait a long time to be paid by the oligarchy – if they were paid at all. The new art-loving class, the middle class, ordered, bought, and paid – in cash.
Today contemporary jewelry’s most loyal customers are under attack: inflation, high taxation, high interest rates, looming unemployment even in highly sophisticated sectors, lockdown-related bankruptcies of small and medium enterprises, international instability due to the war in Ukraine, and luxury goods’ competition from technology products have affected them financially and emotionally.
What is the contemporary jewelry community's answer to this depressing situation? Anti-capitalism... Academics and jewelry theorists who rail against the markets and inculcate students to detest the market may not know how to explain its potential to young designers. The latter have invested time, energy, and money to study a craft – this is their capital. They should not neglect or negate it; on the contrary, they should reject mind-controlling and life-impoverishing ideologies and use their capital creatively to design their own professional success.
To celebrate Schmuck Munich 2023, SMCK Magazine offers all readers a free digital copy of issue no. 8.
Visit the website >>> here (www.smck.org/mag08.html) before 12 March to download your free copy.
About the author

Loukia Richards (Athens, 1965) Visual artist, curator, and co-publisher of SMCK Magazine. Scholarships by Onassis Foundation (1989-1993), Fulbright Foundation (2008), Künstlerdorf Schöppingen Foundation (2011-2012). “Selected Maker” of Crafts Council England (2006). Nominations: European Prize for Applied Arts (Jewellery/Belgium, 2018 and 2021), Herbert Hofmann Prize (Jewellery/Germany, 2017 and 2020). EU Media program funding for Film Script (1998). Research of the Greek embroidery collection at The Textile Museum Washington DC (2008), and internship at Christie's NYC (19th century European painting, 1995). Richards graduated from National Kapodistrian University of Athens (Economics) and University of the Arts Berlin (Visual Communication). Journalism at Reuters News Agency/School of Journalism (London and Athens, 2000). Along with her partner Christoph Ziegler, she curates and produces SMCK On Reel - the first international video festival inspired by jewelry.
www.smck.org | www.loukiarichards.net
- Author:
- Loukia Richards
- Edited by:
- ZLR Betriebsimperium
- Edited at:
- Hamburg / Athens
- Edited on:
- 2023
Forum Shortcuts
-
Melting Pot. A New Online Magazine by Qompendium in collaboration with Pforzheim Jewellery Museum
22Mar2023 -
Schmuck Greenhouses. A Munich Jewellery Week Review 2023
15Mar2023 -
What is it worth? A proposal for a conversation on Contemporary Jewellery and the Market
14Mar2023 -
The Cultural Council of Contemporania High Craftsmanship Barcelona
10Mar2023 -
Anti-Capitalism Rejected
09Mar2023 -
30 Selected Artists at LOEWE FOUNDATION Craft Prize 2023
28Feb2023 -
Contemporania, the New High Craftsmanship in the City of Barcelona
21Feb2023 -
Paradoxical Phenomena in Contemporary Jewelry. A review of Budapest Jewelry Week 2022
20Feb2023 -
The story of Naqsha Navees by Qurat-ul-ain Ali
17Feb2023 -
40 Selected Artists at the 31st International Jewellery Competition
16Feb2023 -
SCHMUCK infopoint
10Feb2023 -
The Error as a Creative Force
09Feb2023 -
Handshake 7 at Gallery Marzee. An Exhibition Review by Mia Straka
06Feb2023 -
Decolonising Jewellery. Article part of the Master Degree Thesis by Khanya Mthethwa
26Jan2023 -
The Pope Is Dead, Long Live the Popess. A Review of a Performance by the artist Neringa Poskute-Jukumiene
24Jan2023