AJF's online articles cover historical pieces and movements, theoretical interpretations of work, and exhibition reviews.
Printed books from Art Jewelry Forum include Geography (exhibition catalog), AJF Best of Interviews, and Show and Tales.
Geography was printed in conjunction with an exhibition of the same name that was presented at SOFA Chicago 2011 and at the Society of North American Goldsmiths conference in Seattle of 2011.
Taking part in the 20 lively conversations are makers such as Lola Brooks, Tanel Veenre, and Jamie Bennett; dealers such as Sienna Patti; curators such as Bruce Pepich and Ursula Ilse-Neuman; and jewelry aficionados such as Madeleine Albright...
Show and Tales published by Art Jewelry Forum in 2015 and was released in Munich in conjunction with the annual Schmuck fair.
To date, Art Jewelry Forum has produced one exhibition titled Geography, which was shown in 2011 at SOFA Chicago[7] and at the Society of North American Goldsmiths conference in Seattle in 2011.
[8] Geography was curated by Susan Cummins and Mike Holmes and features over seventy pieces[9] of jewelry from a wide array of international artists: Fran Allison, Talya Baharal, Agelio Batle, Suzanne Beautyman, David Bielander [nl], Alexander Blank, Iris Bodemer [nl], Angela Bubash, Eric Burris, Suzanne Carlsen, Attai Chen, Jim Cotter, Willemijn de Greef [nl], Bettina Dittlmann, Georg Dobler, Iris Eichenberg, Jantje Fleischhut [nl], Karen Gilbert, Gabrielle Gould, Mielle Harvey, Stefan Heuser, Rory Hooper, Marian Hosking, Sergey Jiventin, Soyeon Kim, Jenny Klemming, Brooke Marks Swanson, Sharon Massey, Christine Matthias, Fritz Maierhofer [de], Malaika Najem, Annelies Planteydt, Alan Preston, Ramon Puig i Cuyàs [ca], Tina Rath, Miriam Rowe, Deborah Rudolph, Estela Saez, Dana Seachuga, Nolia Shakti, Deganit Stern Schocken, Joyce Scott, Helen Shirk, Despo Sophocleous, Cynthia Toops, Julia Turner, Tarja Tuupanen, Sally von Bargen, Lisa Walker, Areta Wilkinson, Francis Willemstijn, Andrea Williams, Nancy Worden[8] Art Jewelry Forum awards grants in three categories; Emerging Artist Award, Exhibition Award, and Speakers and Writers Awards.
She spent five years at the Appalachian Center for Craft studying jewelry fabrication and furniture-making before changing course altogether and getting a degree in journalism.
Nathalie then spent a dozen years in the editorial department at Lark Books, where her background in crafts proved an excellent fit.