Brooklyn Sabino Smith: Orchestrating Unity — Adornment at the Confluence of Ancestry and Futurism

Big heart of gold 

“Brooklyn Sabino Smith” does not simply design jewelry; she composes constellations meant to be worn.

In her studio, light behaves like a collaborator. Morning arrives softly, filtered through gauze curtains, touching sheets of metal, slivers of carved wood, rods of glass, and a velvet tray where diamonds wait with patient, ancient indifference. On the central worktable lies a half-finished piece: a brooch unfurling like a flower not yet cataloged by botany, its geometry echoing Adinkra ideographs—symbols of memory, endurance, interdependence.

Smith moves with the assurance of someone who understands that ornament, at its highest register, is philosophy. Her work is Afrocentric yet unbounded, rooted yet planetary. Petals appear in brass and oxidized silver, spirals emerge from ebony and translucent glass, chromatic planes collide—cobalt against gold, crimson against smoke. Nothing is decorative for decoration’s sake. Every line is a proposition.

This season, her practice bends toward a new axis: futurism braided with ancestry. “I’m looking for the African,” she says, “and the citizen of the world.” In Smith’s lexicon, the two are not opposites but mirrors.

Pinned above her drafting desk is a handwritten note: HEXAGRAM 8 — Pi: Unity, Co-ordination. It is not there as mysticism, but as method.

Water above earth.

The ancient text speaks of assembly, of hearts drawn together, of the peril of lagging behind the current of collective movement. Smith reads it as both omen and instruction. Jewelry, after all, is an intimate architecture of relation: between maker and wearer, body and object, past and possibility.

In anticipation of the Chinese New Year, Smith begins a series she calls Flowing Bowl. The pieces shimmer with kinetic balance—necklaces that seem poured rather than constructed, earrings that hold tension like suspended droplets. Circular forms repeat with subtle variations, invoking continuity rather than closure. She incorporates red lacquered wood beside cool steel, jade-toned glass beside diamond pavé. The palette nods to celebration; the structures whisper of convergence.

The first line of the hexagram becomes a quiet manifesto in metal: Where there is confidence, unification proceeds flawlessly. There is a windfall yet to come.

Confidence, here, is not bravado but fluency. Smith trusts materials that resist her. She coaxes glass into obedience, persuades wood to honor angles, convinces metal to curve like breath. In her hands, disparate mediums negotiate rather than compete.

The second line—unification from within one’s own circle—finds expression in collaboration. Smith invites a woodworker versed in West African carving traditions, a glass artist trained in kiln-formed translucency, a metalsmith obsessed with micro-hinges invisible to the eye. The studio becomes an ecosystem. Ideas circulate. Authority dissolves into dialogue.

Unity is not sameness; it is orchestration.

But the hexagram warns, too. The third line cautions against alliances with what corrodes. Smith recalls early offers that promised visibility at the expense of integrity: shortcuts in craftsmanship, dilution of symbolism, spectacle over substance. She declined. Disaster sometimes wears the mask of opportunity.

By the fourth line, the text gestures outward—co-operation beyond the immediate circle. Smith’s work travels: exhibitions in cities where viewers trace unfamiliar symbols with reverent curiosity, collectors who speak different languages yet recognize the grammar of care embedded in her designs. Her jewelry becomes a site of meeting.

The fifth line tells of a king who loses the quarry ahead because the people were not warned. Smith reads this as a meditation on communication. Art, however refined, falters if it withholds its invitation. She begins writing more—about Adinkra meanings, about material choices, about the ethics of adornment. Context, she understands, is not explanation but hospitality.

And the top line, stark as winter:

Attempts at unity without leadership result in disaster. Leadership, in Smith’s world, is not hierarchy but coherence. The artist must hold the center—not to dominate, but to align. Without that gravitational force, even brilliance scatters.

On New Year’s night, beneath lanterns and the percussive joy of celebration, Smith wears one of her own creations: a pendant where a diamond rests at the nexus of intersecting planes, metal and wood meeting like continents. It catches light, then releases it, as if demonstrating the simplest and most elusive truth:

Beauty is what happens when elements agree to belong to one another.

In Brooklyn Smith’s hands, unity is neither slogan nor symbol alone. It is structure, discipline, destiny—water lying upon the land, co-ordination made visible, a future assembled from fragments that were never truly separate.

@BrooklynSabinoSmith, #BrooklynSabinoSmith, Artist, Jeweler, #JewelryMaker, @JewelryDesigner,

This entry was posted in Art and tagged , , , on by .

About Georgio Sabino III

GS3 Worldwide The GS3 Team is a multi-media design firm that individually designs personal sessions and packages for weddings, corporate, fashion and family photography, and other multi-media art for private and corporate collections. Company Overview GS3 Street Team is a next-generation web-based advertising firm that serves the emerging music entertainment/night club market for events promotion and direct marketing. Located worldwide, we have ready access to the sharpest interns and recent graduates from several universities. Our advertising and promotional campaigns appeal to the local night club/concert market segment. By offering several quality options, we meet the primary needs of three market segments, with additional options for customers transitioning between market segments. In 2007, founder Georgio Sabino III and Team has recognized the opportunity to provide efficient and cost-effective advertisement and promotional marketing services to the local night club/concert industry with few online sources available to meet the needs of the local entertainment industry. Recent changes in the geographic and economic environment have increased the demand for advertisement and promotional marketing services which make it extremely appealing for our prospective clients to reach out through e-commerce and web-based marketing. The GS3 Team sees this as a prime opportunity to apply his business interests and experience to yield high potential profits and work in the area of his greatest passion. Description GS3 art, fashion, and photography team has worked with celebrities, professional athletes, and prominent members of the political, religious and entertainment communities and the community at-large. Mission We, the GS3 team engages as a partner-focused, collaborative approach for those who employ the firm's services, working with a team of beauty, fashion and corporate image experts, to create results that are custom tailored for each individual, family or company. It’s our pleasure to photograph your event weather it’s a weddings, birthdays, anniversaries, showers, gala gatherings, and corporate events we will capture your special moments in the atmosphere as exciting as your occasion and highlight the all the characteristics. -- The GS3 Team How can I add value? * Your professional and personal image will be heightened by the eye and skills of the GS3 team. #GS3Photography, @GS3Photography, #GS3Photography, GS3 Photography, Georgio Sabino III, Wedding Photographer, Wedding Photography, Hire Photographer, Event Photographer, Quality Photographer, Best Photographer Ever!, Affordable, Engagements, Bride & Groom, Family Sessions, www.GS3.us

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *