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Gilian Packard

Birth Date: 1938
Death Date: 1997
School: Central School of Art & Design

Gilian Packard (England 1938-1997) studied at Kingston School of Art, the Central School and the Royal College of Art. She established herself as one of the leading jewellers of the 1960s, winning many major jewellery awards and became the first woman to become a Freeman of the Goldsmiths Company in a professional capacity.

She was particularly noted for her innovative yet elegant rings, described by the jewellery historian Peter Hinks as 'deft and wearable'. This example was part of a series of rings using interlocking forms which she made in the 1970s. She also pioneered the use of interlocking wedding and engagement rings.

She also promoted modern jewellery through her work as a teacher, as Professor of Jewellery and Silversmithing at the Glasgow School of Art and then at the Sir John Cass Department of Silversmithing, Jewellery and Allied Arts of London's Guildhall University