Douglas Magnus

Douglas Magnus and the Living Legacy of Cerrillos Turquoise

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Time to read 5 min

The Last of the Line: Douglas Magnus and the Living Legacy of Cerrillos Turquoise

"Countless craftsmen have worked Cerrillos turquoise from Turquoise Hill for a thousand years, and I am the last of that long line." — Doug Magnus


Some artists make jewelry. Douglas Magnus makes history wearable.


For more than fifty years, the Santa Fe-based jeweler has been one of the American Southwest's most singular creative forces, a self-taught master whose work does not so much borrow from the past as inhabit it. His collections traverse time and culture with remarkable ease, weaving together ancient cosmic symbols, Latin motifs, and contemporary design references into pieces that feel simultaneously timeless and urgently alive. Sorrel Sky Gallery, which represents Douglas Magnus, across its Santa Fe, Durango, SoHo, and East Hampton locations, has long recognized in him a rare convergence: the archaeologist's reverence for history and the artist's appetite for invention.

A Journey Shaped by Place

Douglas Magnus arrived in Santa Fe in the early 1970s, and the city claimed him completely. What began as a personal reckoning, a young man who had failed art school and spent two formative years in the Army finding his footing, became one of the most productive and wide-ranging careers in contemporary American jewelry. The landscapes and layered cultures of New Mexico provided both raw material and spiritual direction. Douglas Magnus has often described his artistic methods as intuitive, his journey as solitary, and the results speak to both qualities: work that is deeply personal yet universally resonant.


Douglas Magnus is, at his core, self-taught. That fact is not incidental to understanding his work — it is essential to it. Without the constraints of formal training, Magnus pursued mastery on his own terms, absorbing techniques for silversmithing, goldsmithing, and lapidary gemstone cutting through hands-on practice and an insatiable curiosity about world cultures. His passion for nature, ancient cosmology, and the visual traditions of Latin America and the broader pre-Columbian world inform every design decision, from the sweep of a pendant's silhouette to the selection of a stone.

The Stone at the Center of Everything

If any single element defines the arc of Douglas Magnus's career, it is turquoise — and not just any turquoise. The Cerrillos Hills, located a short distance south of Santa Fe, contain some of the oldest and most culturally significant turquoise mines in North America. Indigenous peoples mined this land for more than a millennium, and the distinctive blue-green stone that emerged from Turquoise Hill traveled trade routes stretching from the American Southwest to Mesoamerica and beyond.


Douglas Magnus's early visits to these ancient mines proved transformative. He came for the stone and stayed for the story. Today, he owns three of the fabled Cerrillos mines, making him not just an artist who uses this material but a steward of it. His relationship to the mines transcends commerce. "I want to be assured that the mines will always be available for historical, archaeological, and mineralogical study," Douglas Magnus has said — a statement that reveals a man as invested in preservation as in creation.


The Cerrillos turquoise Douglas Magnus sources is a study in rarity. Its intense, clear blue coloration and distinctive matrix set it apart from other turquoise varieties, and the stone's historical weight adds an additional dimension that goes well beyond aesthetics. When a collector acquires a Douglas Magnus work set with Cerrillos turquoise, they hold something that connects them to a thousand years of human craft, ambition, and meaning.

Museum-Quality Collections for the Contemporary Collector

Douglas Magnus's most recent body of work represents the fullest expression of his vision. Using 18-karat gold as his primary medium and Cerrillos turquoise as his signature stone, he has produced a collection that carries the designation "museum-quality" without hyperbole. These are not decorative accessories but wearable sculptures: the "4 Directions Pendant," which encodes cosmological meaning into its very structure; the "Forever Pendant," which transforms classical forms through Magnus's singular eye; the "Thanksgiving Pendant," a piece whose layered symbolism rewards extended contemplation.


Across Douglas Magnus's nine published design volumes, which document five decades of output, Douglas Magnus has demonstrated an extraordinary range. His "Primavera" collection embraces the organic abundance of the natural world. His "Santa Fe Heritage" volume celebrates the enduring influence of Spanish colonial culture on the region's visual identity. "Constellations" reaches skyward, drawing design cues from the celestial. Throughout it all, one finds the same animating intelligence: a maker who refuses to settle for the obvious.


Douglas Magnus buckle designs, explored in depth in "The Art of Buckles," brought serious craftsmanship to a form too often dismissed as purely functional. Douglas Magnus "Skulls and Diamond Plate" volume demonstrated that Magnus's design vocabulary extends into more assertive, masculine territory without losing its fundamental elegance.

The Collector's Opportunity

For galleries and collectors attuned to the increasingly fine line between fine art and fine jewelry, Douglas Magnus represents a compelling proposition. His work occupies that territory with confidence and originality, commanding serious attention in a market that rewards exactly those qualities.


The breadth of his current collection at Sorrel Sky Gallery offers meaningful entry points alongside significant statement pieces, with works ranging from finely crafted pendants and rings to substantial one-of-a-kind creations suited to serious collectors. Each piece carries the full weight of Douglas Magnus's singular biography: the decades of self-directed mastery, the deep connection to place and material, the restless creative intelligence that has never permitted repetition or complacency.


Sorrel Sky Gallery Founder Shanan Campbell notes that Douglas Magnus's work resonates with collectors who seek jewelry as a meaningful investment: "Douglas Magnus is one of those rare artists whose depth of knowledge about his materials and his history gives his work a dimension you simply cannot manufacture. Each piece carries a story that goes back centuries."

A Legacy in the Making

At fifty-plus years into his career, Douglas Magnus shows no sign of narrowing his vision. His identification as the last practitioner in a thousand-year line of Cerrillos turquoise workers is not an elegy; it is a statement of responsibility and resolve. Douglas Magnus has committed to ensuring the mines endure for future scholars and communities. Douglas Magnus continues to design, to teach through his published volumes, and to produce jewelry that challenges the assumption that wearable art must choose between beauty and meaning.


For collectors drawn to the American Southwest's rich artistic heritage, and for those who understand that the finest jewelry transcends ornament entirely, Douglas Magnus offers something increasingly rare: a living connection to antiquity, expressed through the hands of a master who has spent a lifetime earning the title.


Douglas Magnus is represented exclusively by Sorrel Sky Gallery, with locations in Santa Fe, Durango, SoHo, and East Hampton. His work is available in Santa Fe, Durango, and online at SorrelSky.com

Be sure to reach out to our team of art advisors with any questions about the artwork seen in this blog. We'd love to see you in the gallery, where you can enjoy these pieces in person.