David Yurman
David Yurman grew
up on Long Island, NY and first stepped out as a designer and
businessman selling little sculptures in his high school cafeteria. Later, at
age 16, he was introduced to Cuban welder and sculptor Ernesto Gonzales while
visiting his sister in Provincetown, MA. In sculpting, David found an
outlet and focus for his creativity, which he would develop over the next two
decades as an apprentice under the tutelage of renowned sculptors Jacques
Lipshitz and Theodore Rozack (he collaborated with Picasso and Modigliani).
Following a year at NYU, David left college and hitchhiked across the country
to California where he found refuge in the beatnik artist colony of Big
Sur.
In the late 1960s,
David returned from his bohemian sojourn in California to Greenwich
Village where he began working with sculptor Hans Van de Bovenkamp. It was
in his studio that David met Sybil Kleinrock, a gifted painter who, like David,
recently returned from the beatnik scene in California.
While wearing one
of David’s pieces to an art opening, Sybil caught the eye of the gallery owner
who asked if it was for sale. Although David couldn’t dream of recreating
something so personal, Sybil saw an opportunity. In the early 1970s, David and
Sybil moved to the countryside and formed Putnam Art Works. Throughout the
decade, David and Sybil exhibited their designs and paintings at various craft
fairs, and in 1979 they were married. By running Putnam Art Works, the couple
learned the marketplace for fine crafts and jewelry, laying the groundwork for
the founding of David Yurman, the brand and company, in 1980. By the mid-1980s,
Yurman had made a name for himself with his iconic cable bracelet. His company
has gone on to produce various jewelry and watch collections for men and women,
as well as his own signature fragrance and eyewear collection.
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