FRAGILITY
Sareh Zarghampour
Belgium

We give pain meaning through the moments we live with it.
I explore pain not merely as a physical reaction, but as an emotional, internal state something deeply tied to human fragility. Pain is a personal and often invisible experience, unique to each individual, carried quietly within the body. It is this intimate and hidden nature of pain that I translate into jewelry.
Each piece reflects a part of the journey: the encounter with pain, the experience of it, and the trace it leaves behind. When worn, the true nature of these works remains concealed from the viewer. This invisibility mirrors the fragility of our inner worlds and the difficulty of expressing them outwardly.
Because language often fails to express the depth of pain, I turn to jewelry as a more intimate and tactile form of communication. The body as both the source and the site of pain remains my central inspiration, holding within it the quiet vulnerability that defines human fragility.

Necklace « Encounter », 2025
200*200 mm / 20 gr
Copper, enamel, thread, silver
Enameling, engraving by laser

More « FRAGILITY »

Fragility – Aimee Howard-Clinger / USA

FRAGILITYAimee Howard-ClingerUnited StatesFragments explores the fragility of culture and identity amid the fractures of political unrest. In recent years, escalating intolerance and prejudice—expressed through divisive rhetoric and acts of violence—have revealed how...

Fragility – Julie Usel / Switzerland

FRAGILITYJulie UselSwitzerland This work explores fragility as both a material and emotional condition — a state where tension, delicacy, and resilience meet. Made of paper-thin silver elements, each piece is carefully sawn and sewn onto a silk background, allowing it...

Fragility – Ute van der Plaats / Belgium

FRAGILITYUte van der PlaatsBelgiumMy mother was born as a Berglanddeutsche, a German-speaking minority living in the Banat, a region that belongs to Romania since the end of the First World War. In 1944 the family fled from the Russian invasion to Germany. I never got...

Fragility – Juan Riusech / Spain

FRAGILITYJuan RiusechSpainAnd if the most fragile thing was our society ? What could happen if we go back to the dark Mid Age ? Brooch “Medieval II”, 2024100 x 150 x 7 mm / 36 grPLA, steelHand 3D printed, constructedMore "FRAGILITY"

Fragility – Into Niilo / Belgium

FRAGILITYInto NiiloBelgiumThis work consists of a pair of interlocking knuckledusters that form a single solid object when pressed together. When separated, the phrase I wanna choose love | instead of fear becomes legible. The object is a 3D-printed steel puzzle...

Fragility – Eiko Nakahara / Japan

FRAGILITYEiko NakaharaJapanThings we believed would never break often turn out to be fragile, brittle, and weak. We sometimes find beauty in broken objects or ruins. Yet even if we perceive life and beauty in fragile, weak things, witnessing the scenes of frequent...

Fragility – Barbara Schwager / Switzerland

FRAGILITY Barbara SchwagerSwitzerlandFragile Moods Moods come and go. They are subject to fluctuations and external influences. We cannot always control them in our favour—in other words, “just be happy.” Only we ourselves know how we feel—and often we have to present...

Fragility – Anne Blok / Netherlands

FRAGILITYAnne BlokNetherlandsThe fragile threads of memory Life is fragile; it is temporary and precious. This brooch tells the story of a young life, life in the bud and the rose that never reached full bloom. The brooch tells the story of a thirteen year-old girl....

Fragility – Amertah E. Perman / USA

FRAGILITYAmertah E. PermanUnited StatesMade in response to the exhibition theme, this piece provides the wearer ready access to tissues – a tissue when you need it.The vintage floral fabric mimics both the modern American floral tissue box (standard grocery store...

Fragility – Daye Kim / UK

FRAGILITYDaye KimUnited KingdomSibling relationships exist at the fragile intersection of intimacy and distance. Derived from sib (kinship) and sibja (blood + "one's own"), "sibling" embodies a paradox: they are extensions of ourselves yet wholly separate. This...