In a world where luxury and art often dance around each other, Tiffany & Co. and contemporary artist Daniel Arsham have found a way to make the union feel intimate and electrifying. Their latest collaboration is a poetic take on transformation: a patinated bronze sculpture shaped like an eroded penny, with a hidden treasure inside a dazzling, limited-edition Tiffany HardWear necklace reimagined through Arsham’s creative lens.

This is not their first rendezvous. Since joining forces in 2021, Tiffany and Arsham have nurtured a partnership rooted in craftsmanship, curiosity, and a willingness to rewrite tradition. But this release feels especially personal, an object that carries both weight and whimsy.

The Bronze Eroded Penny Vessel, handcrafted in Arsham Studio in New York, draws inspiration from his early works and Tiffany’s own history, including their 1885 redesign of the U.S. Great Seal. With its rich green patina and gleaming crystal accents, the vessel sits at the intersection of relic and sculpture, both ancient and futuristic, familiar and strange.

And nestled within? The real surprise. A bold new take on Tiffany’s HardWear necklace, crafted in 18k white gold and encrusted with over 1,000 diamonds and 500 tsavorites. The design pays homage not only to New York’s gritty elegance but also to the archival 1971 piece that inspired the HardWear collection. The addition of tsavorites, a vivid green gemstone introduced by Tiffany in the 1970s—ties back to Arsham’s own signature color palette and the weathered glow of the vessel.

My work explores the idea of history as a living, evolving entity,” Arsham shared. “This collaboration allowed me to push that idea even further, turning something iconic into something entirely new.”

Each of the 39 limited-edition sculptures comes encased in a custom Tiffany Blue® art crate, complete with dual-branded white gloves for those lucky enough to handle it firsthand. It’s a collector’s dream, but also something more intimate: a story told in metal and gemstone, where fine jewelry and fine art blur into one.

A collaboration that’s not just about precious metals or rare stones, it’s about emotion, memory, and transformation.