hip-hop culture. A status symbol, a cultural symbol, a fashion statement, a marker of success — this is an accessory with roots far deeper and more varied than one might imagine. And now, a new exhibition at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City is exploring how the genre evolved through stunning jewellery pieces that dotted and graced some of hip-hop’s biggest stars.
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‘Ice Cold: An Exhibition of Hip-Hop Jewelry’ chronicles the evolution of hip-hop jewellery across five decades, starting with the oversized gold chains that were embraced by rap’s pioneers in the late-1970s and moving through the 1990s, when hip-hop’s popularity exploded and artists sported record-label pendants sparkling with diamonds and platinum. With hip-hop’s exponential growth in the new millennium, the genre’s most influential artists turned to multi-coloured jewelry with inventive designs that reference high fashion, pop culture, rap history and more.
All of this is chronicled in Ice Cold, where visitors can see cultural gems like Slick Rick’s gem-encrusted crown (Slick Rick pioneered the royal motif in hip-hop); the Adidas necklace from Jam Master Jay of Run D.M.C., made in honour of the hit 1986 song My Adidas; Notorious B.I.G.’s legendary gold ‘Jesus piece’; a large plastic clock worn by Public Enemy rapper Flavor Flav(clock pendants became his calling card); Nicki Minaj’s sparkling ‘Barbie’ pendant; a multi-colored, fully-articulated LEGO mini-figure pendant commissioned by A$AP Rocky; and pieces from Erykah Badu, A Joey Bada$$, FERG and Tyler, the Creator, among others.