Jewellery artist Lin Shiao Tung wearing one of his Eric Jade Bear brooches
“There’s no gemstone in the world as beautiful, gentle, and symbolic of many wonderful virtues as jade.”
For millennia, jade has occupied a sacred tier in Chinese culture, revered not merely as ornamentation but as a physical manifestation of moral integrity. It is the stone of the scholar, the emperor, and the sage—heavy with history and often bound by ceremonial rigidity. However, this profound weight often places jade at a distance from the modern wearer, categorizing it as an heirloom for the mature rather than a companion for the contemporary soul.
Taiwanese jewellery artist Lin Shiao Tung seeks to dismantle this perception. By infusing the stone with whimsy and personal narrative, he transforms jade from a static symbol of antiquity into a living, breathing medium of affection.
Lin’s approach to jade is one of tender deconstruction. Founded in 1999, his eponymous brand emerged from a desire to bridge the gap between the gemstone’s formidable legacy and the lightness of modern life. He does not treat jade as a relic to be worshipped, but as a material warm enough to hold a story.
The artist’s philosophy is most visibly realized in his signature Eric Jade Bear collection. Here, the solemnity of nephrite is softened into the rounded, inviting forms of a teddy bear. It is a striking juxtaposition: the hardest of stones carved into the softest of childhood symbols.
By surrounding the jade with colourful gemstones, Lin introduces a chromatic playfulness rarely seen in traditional jadeite jewellery. The result is an object that retains the “gentle” virtue of the stone while shedding its austere exclusivity.
“Every piece of jewellery I create is meant to represent something meaningful and special,” Lin notes. The technical execution supports this intent; the jade is not merely set, but cradled by 18-karat gold and accented with diamonds or opals, suggesting a preciousness that is protective rather than ostentatious.
Beyond the aesthetic shift, Lin’s work is deeply rooted in the emotional landscape of fatherhood. The transition from a designer in the 1990s to a brand founder exacted a toll familiar to many dedicated craftsmen: the sacrifice of time. Buried in the pursuit of building his legacy, Lin found himself observing the sudden passage of time as his children grew.
The Messenger of Happiness collection, featuring the bluebird motif, and the Eric Jade Bear series are not just commercial designs; they are crystallised emotions. They stem from a period of reflection—specifically, the melancholic watershed moment of seeing his daughter off at the airport as she left for studies in the United States.
In this context, the jade bear becomes a surrogate for presence. It is an emblem of love and innocence, a tangible connection between a father and his distant child. The jade, known for its durability and permanence, becomes the perfect vessel for a parent’s enduring affection.
Through these creations, Lin Shiao Tung achieves a rare synthesis. He preserves the cultural dignity of Chinese jade while allowing it to speak the universal language of family, longing, and memory. The stone remains ancient, but the spirit within it is undeniably new.
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