The 2009 Fish’s Dream by Wallace Chan, a brooch and sculpture of an angelfish crafted with ametrine, opal, lapis lazuli, and sapphire
For nearly half a century, Wallace Chan has occupied a singular space in the contemporary art world, operating where the rigid disciplines of monumental sculpture and the delicate intimacy of high jewelry converge. His creations are rarely just objects of adornment; they are visceral, thought-provoking inquiries into existence, rendered in titanium, gemstone, and light.
Chan’s oeuvre has traversed the globe, commanding attention in the hallowed halls of TEFAF Maastricht and the Biennale des Antiquaires. His legacy is cemented within the permanent collections of institutions such as the British Museum, the Beijing Capital Museum, and the Ningbo Museum. Yet, to observe a Wallace Chan masterpiece—admiring only the refined technique or the sheer caliber of the stones—is to see only half the picture. The true resonance of his work lies in the spiritual odyssey that birthed it.
Like the great masters of history, from Michelangelo to the contemporary avant-garde, Chan’s artistry is forged in the fires of adversity. It is a testament to the idea that hardship is often the sharpest chisel for the soul, carving out the empathy and profound connection that define truly great art.
Chan’s narrative is one of resilience rather than privilege. His journey began not in an academy, but in the stark reality of survival. Leaving formal education at the age of 13 to support his family through odd jobs, he was eventually steered by his uncle toward the gemstone trade three years later. The logic was pragmatic: a gemstone-carving apprenticeship would provide a stable, marketable skill.
However, the industrial repetition of the factory floor stood in stark contrast to Chan’s burgeoning artistic consciousness. He quickly realized that the apprenticeship offered mechanical replication, not creation. “I wasn’t learning what I wanted to at the factory—instead I was learning what other factory workers were doing,” Chan reflects.
In a move that alarmed his family but defined his future, he abandoned the safety of the assembly line. He chose the precarious path of the autodidact. “I consider myself a brave person, in the sense that I’m willing to work hard—I’m not afraid of hardship,” he asserts. “I wanted to explore the world out there.”
At 17, armed with nothing more than two pieces of malachite, a few modest tools, and a formidable will, Chan founded his own carving workshop. This was the genesis of a career built on defying convention, where the lack of formal training became a liberation, allowing him to invent techniques that traditionalists deemed impossible.
The technical mastery Chan achieved is inextricably linked to his spiritual framework. His approach to the stone is not one of domination, but of dialogue and surrender.
Deeply influenced by Buddhist philosophy, Chan views the act of creation as a meditative process of self-negation. “Buddhist thinking talks about the road or the path leading to the universe,” he explains. For Chan, the artist must dissolve their ego to truly connect with the medium. “When you want to really understand the universe, you need to first forget who you are, forget your own existence so that you can become part of the universe.”
This philosophy transforms his jewelry into something metaphysical. Whether it is the Fish’s Dream (2009), with its fluid interplay of ametrine and opal, or the transformative complexity of Hera (2019), the works are not merely static objects. They are crystallized moments of a mind that has learned to empty itself, allowing the light of the universe to pass through.
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