Tiffany x Daniel Arsham: the jewellery sculpture that shakes up the codes

Is it possible to encapsulate both eternity and ephemerality in a precious object? Tiffany & Co. takes up the challenge with a radical new collaboration, once again teaming up with American artist Daniel Arsham. The result: a collector’s work in which jewelry becomes manifest.
A sculpted vision of time
Called Bronze Eroded Tiffany Blue HardWear Pocket Vessel, the piece imagined by Arsham embodies the dialogue between past, future and material. Designed in patinated bronze, it bears the artist’s aesthetic hallmarks: erosion, fragmentation, archaeological appearance. It seems to have been extracted from a museum of the future, halfway between relic and conceptual art.
But the apparent rough exterior hides a sumptuous secret: a reinterpretation of the Tiffany HardWear necklace, an icon of the New York house. This unprecedented version in 18-carat white gold, adorned with over 1,000 diamonds and nearly 500 tsavorites, is revealed in all its power. The object becomes a double work: high jewelry and narrative sculpture, mirroring a luxury that dares to think differently.
An experience for collectors only
Only 39 numbered pieces will see the light of day. Each piece is delivered in a bespoke Tiffany Blue case, accompanied by Arsham Studio gloves, like a relic to be handled with care. Everything here celebrates gesture, ritual and intention. It’s no longer a question of simply buying a piece of jewelry, but of entering into a private, museum-like experience, reserved for a select few.
This collaboration is not simply a cross between art and luxury: it places jewelry in a contemporary narrative, where the material tells a story, the design questions and the jewel becomes a memory.
Tiffany & Arsham: when jewelry tells the story of an era
Since their first dialogue in 2022, Tiffany & Co. and Daniel Arsham have been shaping a new vision of exceptional jewelry. Here, no flashy marketing, but a discreet yet powerful manifesto, where beauty lies not only in the brilliance of the stones, but in the depth of the story.
Where traditional luxury seeks to freeze time, Arsham melts, twists and hollows it, the better to reveal the power of the present.
Also read: Jacquemus at Versailles: an intimate tribute to the “Peasant”.