Ellen Buie Niewyk

I am drawn to the beautiful designs found in nature and ancient metal techniques and processes. My goal is to apply them in my personal work and give them a contemporary twist.
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Channel wood (fossilized)
fine and sterling silver
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Agate
fine and sterling silver
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Lace agate,
fine and sterling silver
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Montana agate, citrine, Argentium
fine and sterling silver
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Tremolite, tourmaline, Argentium
fine and sterling silver
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Boulder opal, Argentium
fine and sterling silver
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Print stone jasper, turquoise
fine and sterling silver
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Petrified wood with opal replacement Argentium
fine and sterling silver
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Peruvian opals in white quartz, Argentium
fine and sterling silver
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Petrified wood with opal replacement
fine and sterling silver
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Piranha agate, peridot, Argentium
fine and sterling silver
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Petrified wood with opal replacement, citrine, Argentium
fine and sterling silver
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Quartz with tourmaline inclusions
sterling silver
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Petrified wood with opal replacement, Argenium
fine and sterling silver
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Larimar
22k gold, sterling silver
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Herkimer quartz
22k gold granulation, 18k gold
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Cacoxinite
fine and sterling silver
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Rutilated quartz
brass, copper, sterling silver

Keum-boo (also Kum-Boo or Kum-bu - Korean "attached gold") is an ancient Asian technique of fusing pure gold (24k) onto sterling and fine silver. Traditionally, this procedure is accomplished by first depleting the surface of sterling silver to bring up a thin layer of fine silver. Then, 24k gold is applied with heat for a permanent fusion bond. This technique is used in many cultures including Korea, China, and Japan.

Ellen Buie Niewyk-earrings-8386
24k and 18k gold
sterling silver, coral bead
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24k and 18k gold
sterling silver, coral bead
Ellen Buie Niewyk-earrings-6667
24k and 18k gold
sterling silver

Ellen Buie Niewyk

eniewyk@gmail.com
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photo of ellen Buie Niewyk

Fossil and rock formations, found along the brazos river in Texas have inspired Ellen's jewelry designs. The stones in these settings come from all over the world.

Ellen Buie Niewyk received her BFA from the University of North Texas in 1976 and her MFA from Southern Methodist University in 1978. She studied silversmithing with Edward Mattil at UNT and later attended classes and workshops at the Craft Guild of Dallas; the Jewelry Arts Institute in New York (a school that concentrates in ancient metal techniques); Penland School of Crafts in Penland, North Carolina (with John Cogswell); The Shepherdess in San Diego, California (with Lynne Merchant); and with Jean Stark, an authority in the field of ancient metal techniques.

Ellen began work at Southern Methodist University in 1987 and served as Curator of Bywaters Special Collections located in the Hamon Arts Library until her retirement in 2021. She is the author of Jerry Bywaters: Lone Star Printmaker (SMU Press).

Austrailian Yellow Agate stone lariet

Ellen’s interest in ancient metalworking stems from her study of Greek art at SMU and her experiences as the Eugene McDermott Graduate Intern at the Dallas Museum of (Fine) Art during the Pompeii A.D. 79 exhibit in 1978 - 1979. She employs such techniques as granulation and classical chain making, using fine silver (.999 silver), sterling silver (.925 silver), and gold with various types of semi-precious beads and stones. She is also interested in the ancient Korean technique of "Keum-boo" (sometimes spelled "kum-bu") which is the application of pure gold (24 k) onto sterling and fine silver.

Ellen’s work was featured in the Dallas Morning News article, “Golden Links to the Past” (March 29, 2007) and on the Southern Methodist University website (“Ancient Art Influences Modern Fashion”). Her work was represented at the Dallas Museum of Art Museum Shop in conjunction with the exhibition, From the Ashes of Vesuvius, In Stabiano: Exploring the Ancient Seaside Villas of the Roman Elite, July 8–October 7, 2007, and at the Meadows Museum, on the campus of Southern Methodist University, during the exhibitions From the Temple and the Tomb: Etruscan Treasures from Tuscany and New Light on the Etruscans: Fifteen Years of Excavation at Poggio Colla, January 25-May 17, 2009. She also presented an evening lecture, “Taking the Mystery Out of Ancient Metal Techniques,” in conjunction with the exhibitions at the Meadows Museum, and in April, 2009, she presented an ancient jewelry demonstration in conjunction with the exhibition Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs at the Center for Creative Connections at the Dallas Museum of Art.

Cretaceous age Gastropod
dating around 100 million years ago
144 to 65 million years old Cretaceous age Gastropod
This is a fossil which I found under the white bluff of the Brazos River in southern Texas.

Ellen was raised in central Texas along the Brazos River and spent many days discovering fossils and seeing the beauty of the natural rock formations along the river. She is currently incorporating designs found in nature in her jewelry and using unique stones that reflect the beauty of the Brazos River area.

Brazos river in central Texas

Ellen Buie Niewyk ~ 2024