Events
2026

March 7, 2026 | 1pm ET
Museum of Arts and Design | NYC

Curator-Led, Private Exhibit Tour

Exclusive Members Event:Join us for an exclusive private exhibit tour at the Museum of Arts and Design, exploring Douriean Fletcher: Jewelry of the Afrofuture with co-curator Sebastian Grant.Crafted from brass, gold, and semi-precious stones, Douriean Fletcher’s boldly sculptural designs articulate Black identity, embody spiritual meaning, and bring Afrofuturism to life. The exhibition traces her research into African and African American jewelry traditions while highlighting how her work builds aesthetic and cultural bridges across Black communities and histories.Featuring 75 works, the exhibition documents Fletcher’s evolution from self-taught metalsmith to influential designer whose handmade adornments helped define cinematic worlds — most notably Marvel Studios’ Black Panther.This intimate, curator-led experience offers rare insight you won’t get during regular museum hours.Saturday, March 7 1:00 p.m. $35 per ticketPhotos from the MAD Museum Exhibit page

March 9, 2026 | 6pm ET
Member Webinar

Member Webinar:
Legacy with Sebastian Grant

MEMBER EVENT

Legacy with Sebastian Grant
Jewelry making and building African American Communities, preserving heritage, and pushing creativity.

Scholarship in the history of jewelry making in the 20th Century has often focused on a very narrow discourse based on primarily white European and American designers, and has often overlooked the creative contributions of other diverse voices, such as the African American community. Many of these designers coming from this community have helped develop contemporary jewelry, providing superb artistic craft to the worlds of fashion, performance, fine art, and art jewelry. Yet these contributions have largely gone unnoticed, as only few Black artists have achieved prominent exhibition and research on their efforts in jewelry making. As America continues to develop a better understanding of its vast and multiplicitous history, continuously incorporating the diverse figures that have previously been forgotten, jewelry scholarship needs to accomplish the same task. This presentation is part of the ongoing effort to capture the many stories of influential Black makers of jewelry, and to let their artistic merits be given the credit that has been long due.

This presentation will cover some of the many contributions of African American jewelers, from the Modernist jewelry practices of the 1940’s to the powerful political statements made in jewelry more recently. We will look at the various fields that benefited from Black creative talent, looking at scenes from fashion and performance, to arts and design. In addition, we will also explore not only the creative works themselves, but also the communities that developed around the enthusiastic exchanges of creative thought. Faced with the constant threat of racism and oppression that plagues America, communities of color formed artistic circles as a means of survival and a preservation of heritage, passing on techniques and traditions in Mid-20th Century jewelry centers as Greenwich Village, to wider artistic circles in Los Angeles and Chicago. Lastly, we will introduce various designers, from widely known names to lesser known contributors, in the hope of increasing wider acknowledgement of these important African American artists, and their great influence and impact on the history of modern jewelry.

Sebastian Grant is a curator and art historian, specializing in art jewelry, and professor at Parsons School of Design in New York City. He is a graduate of the Parsons History of Design and Curatorial Studies Masters Program, and the first participant in the program’s Curatorial Capstone Project. He is a Cooper Hewitt Fellow and was formerly the Collections Manager for the Susan Grant Lewin Art Jewelry Collection. He has presented at New York City Jewelry Week and at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts as the 2022 speaker for the Daphne Farago Lecture Series. He has written for Metalsmith and Art Jewelry Forum, exploring stories of Black jewelry artists in America. In 2022, Grant was the recipient of the Lois Moran Award for Craft Writing from the American Craft Council. Grant most recently curatedThe Story Makers, an exhibition featuring the work of artists such as Cheryl R. Riley, Tanya Crane, and Joyce Scott.  (See full bio here)

March 8-10, 2026
Miami Beach Convention Center | Miami Beach, Florida

BIJC at JIS Miami Spring 2026

BIJC will be hosting an association table at JIS Miami Spring 2026, creating space to connect with members, industry professionals, and new faces during one of the season’s key trade events. If you’re attending the show, stop by our table to say hello, learn more about BIJC, and stay connected with what’s ahead.

 

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