| Jeweler
Jen Hough (continued)
While some parents might have underestimated the potential, Jen’s
mom Bonny actively encouraged her daughter’s creative tendencies.
She would take her daughter from their home in Sturgeon Bay to Northern
Door to expose her to the variety of artwork featured in the many galleries.
“I was five or six when my mom started taking me to the ‘doll
towns,’” Jen remembers. “Doll towns” was what
Jen called Egg Harbor, Fish Creek, Ephraim and Sister Bay since her child’s
eye saw perfect little buildings, some in pastel colors. “My mom
would take me to see different galleries and that’s when I got exposed
to art on such a large scale. The paintings and sculptures that I saw
were so much bigger than anything we were doing at school. It’s
also the first time that I had seen abstract art – not people or
flowers but just pictures of shapes and colors. I just loved it,”
she recalls. Along with her jewelry, Jen was also painting full pictures
at age five, no doubt having her creativity fueled by her mother’s
encouragement. In first grade, she started carving soap and made a sculpture
of her dog, Max. At age eight, her mom gave Jen a soldering iron so she
could start learning how to connect metals. “My mom kept bringing
me all kinds of art supplies. I wasn’t even sure what some of it
was for, but I started experimenting. She also gave me my first Dremel
tool [used for sanding and cutting].”
By the time Jen entered Sevastopol High School, she was spending the majority
of her time in the art department. Jen was drawn to all aspects of art
and that was especially true when she attended the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
(UWM). “I went to a lot of lectures that I wasn’t technically
registered for, mainly the art history classes. I was also attending classes
as a freshman that were meant for seniors, but I just couldn’t get
enough.” By the time Jen reached her junior year, she started also
taking weekly classes in jewelry making at Milwaukee Area Technical College.
During college breaks, Jen had worked locally at the Bead Bucket and was
into beading. While in Milwaukee, she found a job at another bead store.
Her attendance at the technical college originally had a more practical
motivating factor; Jen thought she could make more money if she was able
to repair the metal findings, another beading skill.
It wasn’t long, however, before Jen was drawn completely into the
world of jewelry making. “I’m really intrigued by the intricacies
of jewelry and how tiny the scale is compared to some of the large sculpture
I was doing at UWM. It makes the process so much more challenging, not
to mention you can wear it around. That can’t be said of a large
metal sculpture.” In 2005, Jen completed coursework in gemology
and jewelry fabrication from Northeast Wisconsin Technical College in
Green Bay.
In early 2006, she started working at J. Jeffrey Taylor in Fish Creek.
She quickly became entrenched in all facets of the business from the retail
aspect to custom design work. “Jeff and Jeri have really given me
my start. They have been so helpful to me in developing my jewelry. Jeff
cut his workspace in half so that I could have a place to work on my designs.”
The first time the customers got to see her jewelry range was at her debut
opening in October of 2006. Jeri recalls, “It’s amazing how
she juggles her time. I really don’t know how she did it. She was
working six days a week in the store and would come in off-hours to work
on her jewelry.” The incentive of needing to have enough pieces
for her first show was evidently what kept her on schedule. The turnout
for the opening was larger than expected and Jen sold out of her collection.
Jen’s jewelry is contemporary and uncluttered. She takes shapes
and lines that she sees in every day life and applies to the metal. “I’m
always looking at shapes and sketching them out. I might see a leaf, or
stranger still, be driving behind a truck and see something that will
inspire a pendant.” She currently does most of her jewelry in sterling
silver, although will do more work in gold. Some of her preferred stones
to work with are white sapphires, pearls, peridot, all colors of topaz,
black diamonds, tourmaline, blue zircon, and Jen’s new favorite,
the appetite stone, which “is the color of blue toothpaste. It kind
of glows.”
Her design aesthetic is a reflection of Jen’s personality –
eccentric, quirky, mature, varied, energetic, interesting, and limitless.
“Jen’s work is a great addition to the gallery. Her style
complements Jeff’s work since they are both contemporary,”
Jeri says. “She has a really good feel for metal and stones, not
to mention that her rapport with the customers is great.” Jeff agrees
and adds, “It’s really odd. I haven’t had anyone share
my workspace in over 10 years, and I swore that I would never again, but
then Jen showed up. She has a whole different outlook on things since
she was trained differently than I was. Jen is totally undaunted, refreshing
and eager to learn. That’s something you don’t always find
anymore.”
Jen will admit that her interests run the entire gamut and then some.
Apart from her work in jewelry, she’s an accomplished painter, just
finished a class in welding, is a self-proclaimed fashion addict with
a serious collection of vintage coats (over fifty and counting), loves
gardening, and is not content to just sit around on the couch watching
television, obviously.
The Peninsula Art School will feature Jen’s work as part of their
Jewelry and Metal Arts Invitational exhibit running August 10th through
September 22nd. Her second feature reception at J. Jeffrey Taylor will
take place in October, with the specific date to be announced. Jen is
also considering an offer to exhibit her paintings in a local museum.
In the meantime, she and her collection can be seen on a nearly daily
basis at J. Jeffrey Taylor where she will happily tell you the history
of gemology, her thoughts on French fashion or anything in between.
Jeri Taylor reflects, “She’s got unlimited potential in so
many different areas, and I know her jewelry designs will continue to
evolve. It will be interesting to see where that takes her over the next
10 years.” “Yes,” Jeff adds, “I do wonder where
her career will take her. She’ll branch out since she will never
be satisfied by just doing one thing. I do know that she has too much
talent in jewelry to ever give it up. It will always be part of her life.”
No one can know which direction Jen will take; however, it is guaranteed
that it will be quite a journey to witness.
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