“Our work is not so much about creating beauty as it is about seeking it out and recognizing the beauty that already exists in all things.”
For Brazilian jewellery designer Silvia Furmanovich, the definition of preciousness extends far beyond the traditional hierarchy of gemstones. In her atelier, the brilliance of diamonds and the warmth of 18-karat gold serve not as the main event, but as illuminators for materials often overlooked in high jewellery: wood, bamboo, and vintage textiles.
Her approach is one of reverence rather than invention. By scouring the globe—from the dense rainforests of the Amazon to the antique markets of New York—Furmanovich acts as a curator of organic textures, transmuting them into wearable art. This philosophy has earned her sustained acclaim, including multiple Couture Design Awards for Innovation and recognition from Town & Country, affirming that true luxury lies in the depth of the story, not just the weight of the stone.
Left: Blue Bamboo Ring, made with 18-karat gold, diamonds, a South Sea pearl, and bamboo. Right: Green Bamboo Loop Earrings, made with 18-karat yellow gold, diamonds, green tourmaline, and bamboo.
The Pilgrim and the Artisan
The genesis of Furmanovich’s most defining work began with a serendipitous encounter in a São Paulo museum. A small box, decorated with a parakeet rendered in exquisite wood marquetry, captured her imagination. It was not merely the image, but the technique—the painting with wood—that compelled her to find the hand behind it.
The search led her to Maqueson da Silva, an artisan living in Acre, a remote and often dangerous state deep within the Brazilian Amazon. Undeterred by the logistics, Furmanovich undertook a pilgrimage by plane, car, and boat to reach him.
“I went by myself, very scared, to meet him for the first time,” she recalls.
What she found was a story as intricate as the marquetry itself. Born in the rainforest and shielded from modern industrial life, da Silva’s raw talent was spotted by a priest when he was just sixteen. This discovery led to an unlikely trajectory: the young Amazonian was sent to Germany to apprentice in the trade of marquetry. He returned to the rainforest with a fusion of indigenous sensitivity and disciplined European craftsmanship, eventually establishing an atelier that designs for homes and museums.
Award-winning designer Silvia Furmanovich.
Scaling Down the Infinite
The collaboration between a high jeweller and a furniture master was not immediate. When Furmanovich proposed translating his large-scale marquetry into jewellery, da Silva initially refused. The transition from designing expansive walls and screens to creating objects measured in millimeters required a fundamental shift in perspective.
“You have to convince the artisan that it’s possible. You must have patience,” Furmanovich notes.
The technical challenges were immense. Marquetry relies on the precise assembly of wood veneers to create imagery. To execute this on the scale of an earring or a ring required a level of miniaturization that tested the limits of both the material and the maker. Furthermore, the engineering required to marry organic wood with cold precious metals introduced structural complexities that took years to resolve.
The jewellery pieces in Furmanovich’s collections fill the viewer with an appreciation for beauty, spirituality, and fine craftsmanship.
Today, da Silva employs 25 artisans, each specializing in a specific facet of this miniature architecture. The result is a collection where the wood does not merely sit within a gold bezel but breathes alongside it. For Furmanovich, the arduous process is justified by the human element embedded in every piece.
“I know the story of each piece; this is the value of the jewel for me,” she says. “It’s not only about the sum of the materials involved… I know how many hands touched this piece before the client buys it.”
The jewellery pieces in Furmanovich’s collections fill the viewer with an appreciation for beauty, spirituality, and fine craftsmanship.
A Cross-Cultural Weave
Furmanovich’s gaze eventually turned East, driven by a discovery in a New York antique store. Inside an old box lay 250 swatches of handwoven silk, originally designed for the royal women of Kyoto during the Meiji period (1866–1912).
“It was the most beautiful fabric I’d ever seen,” she admits.
This encounter birthed the Obi Collection, a series that creates a fascinating cultural dialogue. While the iconography—cranes, sparrows, and bamboo shoots—is deeply rooted in Japanese symbolism, the execution relies on the Amazonian craftsmanship she cultivated with da Silva.
Furmanovich works on her Amazonia Bamboo Collection, a celebration of centuries-old techniques of bamboo weaving. Unique for its resilience, flexibility, and durability, bamboo permeates everyday life in Japan.
A standout example is the Crane Clutch, which secured the 2019 Couture Design Award in the Innovation category. The piece is a complex assemblage of gold, diamonds, green tourmaline, and vintage obi fabric, all set within the warm embrace of wood marquetry. The crane, a symbol of longevity and immortality, serves as a bridge between the ephemeral nature of fabric and the permanence of stone.
Crane Clutch from the Obi Collection.
This synthesis reflects Furmanovich’s broader philosophy, one that resonates with the Shinto principles she observed in Japan. It is the idea that the divine resides in nature, and that the role of the artist is to organize these natural elements to reveal their inherent spirit.
“When you arrive in a Shinto temple, you see that beauty in the paintings on the wall, in the silence, in the incense, and in the sun pouring through the paper windows,” she observes. “Everything is there—you don’t create anything. You just put things together to make something new and innovative.”
In her hands, the jeweller’s bench becomes a place of quiet alchemy, where the rainforest meets the temple, and where the raw materials of the earth are elevated to the realm of the sacred.




















