mostra - Page 2

Art design walking to Milan




Special jewels, between art and ornament, for 14 designers: Sara Barbanti, Paula Castro, Laura Forte, Saimi Joutsi, Kaori Juzu, Merıstėma Lab, Valentina Romen, Agustina Ros, Karin Seufert, Yoko Takirai, Giulia Vecchiato, Laura Volpi, Angie Wu, Annachiara Zani. In Milan, the Esh Gallery organized Walking Treasures, a exhibition dedicated to contemporary jewelery. This is the sixth edition of the event. The jewels interpreted by the 14 authors are made with the most diverse materials: metal, glass, ceramic, with stones and natural elements. Glass and metal, for example, are used for the Suri & Ros collection, the result of the collaboration between Agustina Ros and Giulia Vecchiato, exhibited for the first time after a first online presentation at New York Jewelry Week 2020.

Anello di Augustina Ros
Anello di Augustina Ros

Each jewel is born from hand-finished metal plates on which blown glass is applied through a balanced game of contrasts between volumes. The unique feature of the collection is the multifunctionality: the brooches become pendants, the earrings become brooches and so on, with the result of having more jewels in one. Annarita Bianco (Merıstėma Lab), on the other hand, mixes traditional craftsmanship and technology, with jewels made from USB cables, worked with resins set on silver plates and laser engraved to simulate the appearance of modern fossils.

Design di Annachiara Zani
Design di Annachiara Zani

The opposite, in a sense, of the design inspired by the natural world of Annachiara Zani, a young recent graduate of the IED in Milan and nominated for the Klimt02 New Talent Award: she uses alabaster, a semitransparent stone. Against the light, her jewels reveal, behind their elliptical shape, the inscription Visible. The German artist Karin Seufert presents pendants constructed from small points of PVC, empty shapes that have the illusion of weight and recall architecture. The porcelain brooches, on the other hand, follow a continuous search for wearability obtained through the use of uncommon materials in the field of jewelry. Finally, Laura Forte’s gold and silver jewels are characterized by essential lines and shapes, combined with the minimalist style of Yoko Takirai.

ESH Gallery Via Forcella 7 – 20144 Milan
39 0256568164 Timetables
Opening: Tuesday 14 December, 12.00-21.00
From 15 to 23 December: 11.00-19.00
24 December: 11.00-14.00
From 10 to 28 January: by appointment

Design di Laura Forte
Design di Laura Forte
Anello di Laura Volpi
Anello di Laura Volpi
Design Meristema Lab
Design Meristema Lab

Design di Suri&Ros
Design di Suri&Ros







Francesca Mo Only for you

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Francesca Mo returns to the Subert gallery in Milan (via della Spiga 42) for an exhibition of her jewels (10 November-22 December from Tuesday to Friday from 11 to 18, Saturdays, Sundays and holidays by appointment). The gallery, a space reserved for furniture, art objects and vintage collectibles, is the usual place for the Milanese architect and designer who has been involved in jewelry for years. Francesca Mo, daughter of the sculptor Carlo Mo, in fact, started inventing jewels only through materials that have a history, such as glass pebbles worked by the sea, remains of watches, sands, slabs of semiprecious stones.

Anello Only for you
Anello Only for you

More than the materials used (plexiglass, bronze, silver and gold), fantasy and the desire to choose a path radically different from that of traditional jewelery, as in the Only for You and Hover jewelery series, in bronze, are important to the designer. and silver, with white or colored cubic zirconia.

Bracciale Only for you
Bracciale Only for you
Orecchini Hover in bronzo con perla
Orecchini Hover in bronzo con perla
Anello Hover in bronzo con perla
Anello Hover in bronzo con perla
Anello con secret
Anello con secret

Anello Only for you con diamante nero
Anello Only for you con diamante nero







Art jewels in Lugano




A new appointment between art and jewelery in Lugano (Switzerland). The Kromya Art Gallery (Viale Franscini, 11) hosts the exhibition Precious Perspectives. Works and jewels in dialogue dedicated to the works of the architect and designer Eleonora Castagnetta with bronze works by the artist Alex Pinna. The exhibition is curated by Paola Stroppiana, an art historian. The initiative aims to reassign the artist’s jewel a leading role in the contemporary context. “Jewelery as a work of art, perfectly finished, is able to express the strength of creativity on a par with other disciplines, integrating the peculiar expressive-creative dimension of the artistic artefact with the characteristic of wearability.

Spilla in argento e smalti con diamanti
Spilla in argento e smalti con diamanti

From this consideration, the new perspectives for reading the work of the two artists involved are born: Alex Pinna, sculptor, and Eleonora Castagnetta, architect, each decline the jewel according to their own expressive language, finding in it an admirable formal and conceptual opportunity to transpose their own personal poetics “. Eleonora Castagnetta exhibits some unpublished works, inspired by Italo Calvino’s The Invisible Cities, transforming four of the utopian cities described in the volume into a jewel: Dorotea, Fedora, Sofronia and Tecla: silver and enamel brooches with gold and diamond details, in a casket which contextualizes its dimension. The exhibition itinerary is enriched by the presence of other jewels, previously made, inspired by great masters of architecture and the Bauhaus: the Mognolo ring (for the realization of which he drew inspiration from the Church of San Giovanni Battista in Mogno, Switzerland , designed by the internationally renowned architect Mario Botta, with whom Eleonora collaborated for 13 years); Ziggurat; Tribute to Le Corbusier and Tribute to the Bauhaus.

Eleonora Castagnetta, spilla  Dorotea in argento e smalti
Eleonora Castagnetta, spilla
Dorotea in argento e smalti
Fedora, argento e smalti con dettaglio oro
Fedora, argento e smalti con dettaglio oro

Sofronia, argento e smalti
Sofronia, argento e smalti







Cartier and Islamic art, wedding in Paris




What unites Islamic art with a luxury jeweler like Cartier? More than you can imagine. An exhibition in Paris (from 21 October 2021 to 20 February 2022) organized at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs discovers surprising connections and influences. The exhibition is titled Les Arts de l’Islam. Aux sources de la modernité, and is co-organized by the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris and the Dallas Museum of Art, where it appeared last year.

Collier in oro, platino, diamanti, ametiste, turchesi. Commissionato dal duca di Windsor per la duchessa, 1947
Collier in oro, platino, diamanti, ametiste, turchesi. Commissionato dal duca di Windsor per la duchessa, 1947

It turns out, therefore, that Cartier has used some of the traditional ornamental motifs in Islamic art in the design of its jewelry. The exhibition includes over 500 pieces including Cartier jewelry and objects, Islamic art masterpieces, drawings, books, photographs and archival documents. The exhibition explores the origins of this influence through the Parisian cultural context and the figure of Louis and Jacques Cartier, two of the founder’s grandsons, who played an important role in creating a new aesthetic suffused with modernity.
Diadema in oro, corallo, diamanti
Diadema in oro, corallo, diamanti

Founded in 1847 by Louis-François Cartier, the Parisian Maison initially specialized in the sale of jewelery and works of art. The founder’s son, Alfred, took over the company in 1874 and his eldest son, Louis, joined in 1898. At that time, Cartier designed its own jewelry, while continuing to resell antiques. At the beginning of the 20th century, Louis Cartier sought new inspiration. And Paris was the epicenter of the Islamic art trade: through the great exhibitions organized at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris in 1903 and then in Munich in 1910, Louis discovered exotic design.
Ornamento per turbante in piume, platino, oro e diamanti, 1924
Ornamento per turbante in piume, platino, oro e diamanti, 1924

The exhibition also explores Jacques Cartier’s travels, such as the one to India in 1911, where he met the Maharajahs of the subcontinent. These sources of inspiration and oriental jewels have enriched the collections of the Maison Cartier, such as turban ornaments, tassels, bazubands (an elongated bracelet worn on the upper arm). Cartier has used these formats for several jewels, with an exceptional result. Almond shapes, palmettes, foliage, sequins, volutes, scales, have been interpreted with lapis lazuli and turquoise, combining the green of jade or emerald with the blue of lapis lazuli or sapphire to create his famous peacock model.
Portasigarette in oro e smalto, 1924
Portasigarette in oro e smalto, 1924

Cartier, diadema in platino e diamanti, 1923
Cartier, diadema in platino e diamanti, 1923
Cartier, bracciale in oro e diamanti
Cartier, bracciale in oro e diamanti

Cartier, tiara in platino, diamanti e turchesi, 1936
Cartier, tiara in platino, diamanti e turchesi, 1936







Fantastic jewels and where to find them (in New York City)




Men and beasts. Or, rather, creatures that are part of the world of nature. And jewelry. Animals are at the center of an exhibition in New York called Beautiful Creatures, which brings together some of the most spectacular jewels inspired by the world of animals. The exhibition is organized at Melissa and Keith Meister Gallery within the American Museum of Natural History. Over one hundred precious jewels created by the greatest jewelry houses have been selected, from the iconic panthers of Cartier to the butterflies of Suzanne Belperron. With rather rare pieces, such as the necklace by the American designer Joel Arthur Rosenthal, better known as Jar: the one on display, one of the few made by the legendary jeweler, is from 1990 and is made with precious and semiprecious stones and with pavé diamonds set in silver and gold. The selected jewels have been crafted over the past 150 years, in line with the museum’s recent 150th anniversary celebration.

Collana Serpente d - Jar in oro, argento, ametiste, zaffiri, diamanti
Collana Serpente d – Jar in oro, argento, ametiste, zaffiri, diamanti

The selected jewels exclude pets, while they include those somehow present in some corner of the museum. There are many great Maison present, from Bulgari to Van Cleef & Arpels, as well as contemporary designers such as Bina Goenka. The exhibition, which was actually announced in autumn, but then postponed due to the covid, is present in the new permanent rooms of Allison and Roberto Mignone and is free and to visit it requires health safety measures (i.e. a little distancing ).
Spilla leone in oro e zaffiri gialli di Van Cleef & Arpels
Spilla leone in oro e zaffiri gialli di Van Cleef & Arpels

Spilla a forma di zampa di leone di Fulco di Verdura. È composta con una conchiglia di capesante acquistata dal designer italiano nel negozio di articoli da regalo del Museo nel 1940.jpg
Spilla a forma di zampa di leone di Fulco di Verdura. È composta con una conchiglia di capesante acquistata dal designer italiano nel negozio di articoli da regalo del Museo nel 1940.jpg
Stella di mare flessibile disegnata da Salvator Dalì nel 1950
Stella di mare flessibile disegnata da Salvator Dalì nel 1950
Spilla in oro con ametista, smeralzi, zaffiri, smalto di Suzanne Belperron
Spilla in oro con ametista, smeralzi, zaffiri, smalto di Suzanne Belperron

Spilla a forma di cervo volante in oro, zaffiri e diamanti realizzata da Boucheron nel 1895
Spilla a forma di cervo volante in oro, zaffiri e diamanti realizzata da Boucheron nel 1895







Jewels that amaze on display

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Beauty and Astonishment is the name of the avant-garde jewelry exhibition in which 26 designers from different countries participate. The exhibition, curated by designer Luis Acosta, continues until 30 June 2021 at the Galería Context in Sant Cugat del Vallès (Barcelona, ​​Spain). The event brings together the work of designers in search of new forms and, almost always, with unusual materials for the world of jewelry. In addition to the classic bronze used by designers such as Laura Volpi, materials such as slate or deer bones are added. In any case, it offers the possibility of a glimpse into a type of jewelry that is not the main stream one.

Laura Volpi, orecchini in bronzo satinato
Laura Volpi, orecchini in bronzo satinato

Here are the participants of the Beauty and Astonishment exhibition:
Iro Kaskani, Elvira Cibotti, Fumiko Nakajima, AMÀLGAMA (Giorgia Tasca), Ana Marchetanu, Bárbara Laso, Cartonpia (Alejandra Epifani), Chokolom (Esther Ortiz-Villajos), Duo Wonder (K. Noelmans – Sofie Hermans), Esteban Erosky Soria, Iona Nieva, Julie Bégin, Katharina Moch, Laura Volpi, Magali Thibault Gobeil, Meristèma Lab. (Annarita Bianco), Misaki Nomoto, almost candy (Mariolina Mascarino), Saadah Bin Shehab, Sita Falkena, Studiozero-Vetro (Caterina Zucchi) , Susanne Hammer, Valeria Rossini, Yael Friedman, Yiota Vogli.
Valeria Rossini, anello in bronzo con lapislazzulo, corallo e osso di cervo
Valeria Rossini, anello in bronzo con lapislazzulo, corallo e osso di cervo

Chokolom (Esther Ortiz Villajos), orecchino in ottone bagnato in rodio nero, gesso
Chokolom (Esther Ortiz Villajos), orecchino in ottone bagnato in rodio nero, gesso
Bárbara Laso, collana in ardesia, mattone, ottone
Bárbara Laso, collana in ardesia, mattone, ottone

julie Bégin, orecchini in legno carbonizzato, argento, pietra verde
julie Bégin, orecchini in legno carbonizzato, argento, pietra verde







Milano Jewelry Week returns in June




Technical restart tests: vaccines and the effectiveness of health measures offer Prodes, the organizer of the Milan Jewelry Week, the certainty of fixing the second edition from 3 to 6 June. To remain in the field of jewelry, Vicenzaoro, which however is a completely different type of fair, has instead already established the return of the full-blown event from 10 to 14 September, while Oroarezzo is scheduled for 12 to 15 June. Naturally in the belief that we are slowly but surely emerging from the pandemic tunnel.

Edizione di primavera di Artistar Jewels 2019
Edizione di primavera di Artistar Jewels 2019

The second Milan Jewelry Week, in any case, includes exhibitions, vernissages, exhibitions of international galleries and schools, award evenings, workshops, cocktail parties and performances. Objective: to tell the jewel in all its forms from multiple points of view, from history to technique, passing through the contamination with art and fashion. Among the appointments there are Artistar Jewels (a competition), The Jewelry Hub, Jewelry Drops and Talent Show, as well as didactic-training moments by teachers and experts in the sector who will hold conferences and workshops to which it will be possible to access upon registration. Among these John Moore, one of the most authoritative and well-known names in contemporary jewelry who, in addition to giving a lecture, will unveil pieces created specifically for Milano Jewelry Week.
Gioielli di Zēlé Jewellery
Gioielli di Zēlé Jewellery

Artistar Jewels, now in its eighth edition, will be organized again at Palazzo Bovara (Corso Venezia 51) and will collect the jewels of 200 artists and designers from 40 different countries. The Jewelry Hub will showcase the latest news from 40 brands “selected according to very stringent criteria” in a setting with a strong visual impact set up in a building full of history in the center of Milan. It is the most business area, with the possibility of buying the pieces on display. Jewelry Drops, on the other hand, is a phyigital collective in which international artists and designers will take part, both in presence and remotely, with the result of giving life to a dynamic and original exhibition space that will offer an overview of the jewel.

Anello di Inesa Kovalova
Anello di Inesa Kovalova

Bracciale e anello di Salima Thakker
Bracciale e anello di Salima Thakker







The gems of wonders with Van Cleef & Arpels




Van Cleef & Arpels is, among the jewelery houses, one of those that boasts great attention in the choice of precious stones. A testimony of this special attitude is the Pierres précieuses exhibition, inaugurated at the Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle in Paris and which will continue until June 14, 2021. The work of Van Cleef & Arpels is entitled Rocher aux merveilles and is centered on the contrast between rough stones and high jewelery. The nine high jewelery creations that make up the Rocher aux Merveilles include ring, clip, pendant, earrings and bracelet.

La composizione Rocher aux merveilles
La composizione Rocher aux merveilles

The most surprising aspect of the exhibition is just the contribution made by the Parisian Maison, which used a large raw stone of lapis lazuli of 6.2 kilograms that looks like a mountain, resting on a 13 kilogram blue quartz plate, next to a forest of tourmaline crystals for 2,171 carats and with a small treasure of high jewelery: a dragon, a unicorn, two fairies, flowers, and a cascade of diamonds and sapphires. The whole is a miniature fairy tale landscape. An atmosphere that, in fact, is one of the recurring inspirations in the high jewelery collections by Van Cleef & Arpels.
La clip unicorno
La clip Unicorno

The making of this small world of fine jewelry involved carving the fairies and the unicorn in wax, cutting the stones, assembling, crafting jewelry, setting and polishing. In all, almost 6,400 hours of work were required, with over 4,700 hours of jewelry, 1,200 hours of setting and 500 hours of polishing.
Clip con diamanti e zaffiri rosa
Clip con diamanti e zaffiri rosa

Posizionamento dei cristalli di tormalina
Posizionamento dei cristalli di tormalina
La locandina della mostra Pierres précieuses
La locandina della mostra Pierres précieuses
Posizionamento della clip Palmyre con diamanti e zaffiri sulla roccia di lapislazzulo
Posizionamento della clip Palmyre con diamanti e zaffiri sulla roccia di lapislazzulo
Il modellino in cera della clip Unicorno
Il modellino in cera della clip Unicorno







Florence Jewelery Week also canceled




Another event related to jewelry has been canceled: Florence Jewelery Week 2020 undergoes coronavirus quarantine. In fact, it is a non-news, even if it was not official.

Florence Jewellery Week edizione 2017
Florence Jewellery Week edizione 2017

Since we entered the Covid emergency we have resisted and continued to work on our project as in recent months, every day, imagining the set-ups, the meetings, talking daily with the people involved, with the press office, as if this confinement and this closure did not concern us, that things would be resolved, and we would meet at the end of May in Florence. Instead, we had to take note of reality, and accept that there are now more important things than our project to think about.
Giò Carbone, Lao’s artistic director and Fjw curator

Chia Hsien Lin, Smelling Memories
Chia Hsien Lin, Smelling Memories

As a result, exhibitions, conferences, seminars and meetings have been canceled. It is not a postponement: a project with these characteristics cannot simply be moved to another date. Difficult to put together the group of artists and the collections that had been involved in a long work of almost two years. For the curator, Giò Carbone, and for the organizers of Lao, the satisfaction remains of having ascertained the esteem, credibility and respect that have been granted to him by those who joined the project.






The Cuore capsule by Liu Jo Luxory in the Be a Sweetheart exhibition in Milan





The capsule collection Cuore presented by Liu Jo Luxury in the Be a Sweetheart, the heart in fashion jewelry, an exhibition organized in Milan, February 8-18 at Palazzo Giureconsulti, by Homi Fashion & Jewels in collaboration with the Poli.Design.

Bracciale Cuore di Liu Jo Luxury
Bracciale Cuore di Liu Jo Luxury

The heart is a must of our jewelry collections and in these 12 years we have proposed it through numerous reinterpretations that have always achieved great success. The jewelry collections, given the positive response on the market, are and will continue to be among the characterizing elements of the Liu Jo Luxury offer.
Bruno Nardelli, CEO of Liu Jo Luxury

Bruno Nardelli
Bruno Nardelli

The exhibition is dedicated to the interpretations of the heart in fashion jewelry, in its variations in balance between art and fashion, sacred and profane, love and feelings. The Liu Jo Luxury capsule is characterized by a design with a laced texture and consists of themed necklaces, bracelets and earrings.
Orecchini della collezione Cuore
Orecchini della collezione Cuore

Liu Jo Luxury is Liu Jo’s brand extension for watches and jewelery: it was owned by Bruno Nardelli’s Nardelli Luxury, which became Liu Jo Luxury in 2017, a joint venture between Liu Jo and Nardelli. The new company has Bruno Nardelli as CEO, while president is Marco Marchi, who is the sole director of Liu Jo. Liu Jo Luxury was born with the aim of consolidating the positioning of the brand on foreign markets.
Be a Sweetheart, the heart in fashion jewelry
From 8 to 18 February 2020
Milan, Palazzo Giureconsulti
Hours: 10.00 / 18.30 – Free admission
Collana della collezione Cuore
Collana della collezione Cuore







The buttons transformed into bijoux-design by Lea Stein are on exhibition





French Lea Stein is considered an innovative designer in the field of plastic jewelry. An exhibition at the Bijou Museum in Casalmaggiore (Cremona) is dedicated to the designer, describing his creative career.

Lea Stein, spilla Tenniste. Foto: Luigi Briselli
Lea Stein, spilla Tenniste. Foto: Luigi Briselli

Lorena Taddei, a Milanese antique dealer, acted as a link between the artist and the museum. Directly from Lea Stein’s Parisian archive, hundreds of pieces never before exhibited were received in Casalmaggiore: the rarest brooches, among which the amazing silk-screened, the objects of tablecloths (some of them created for the Maison Guerlain), bracelets, rings, necklaces and buttons.
Spilla Sacha. Foto: Luigi Briselli
Spilla Sacha. Foto: Luigi Briselli

The sentimental, and then also professional, adventure of Lea and Fernand Steinberger starts from a button: they meet by chance, he compliments her for an original button that she wears. Only a few years after that meeting, however, the two meet again and can unite their lives and passions. Born in 1936 in Paris from a Jewish family of Polish origin and who escaped the horrors of the war, Lea Stein began the production of her brooches in the sixties: collectors know her characters (the Ballerina, Carmen, the Diver …) and animals (the Ric dog, the Gomina cat, the famous Fox …), made in the most curious and fascinating patterns with cellulose acetate sheets, cut and superimposed by her husband Fernand with a technique he himself invented and still secret.
Spilla Pavone. Foto: Luigi Briselli
Spilla Pavone. Foto: Luigi Briselli

The originality of her pieces is therefore entrusted to this ingenious recipe and is guaranteed by the dovetail clasps on which the inscription Lea Stein – Paris is engraved.
Spilla Marcelle. Foto: Luigi Briselli
Spilla Marcelle. Foto: Luigi Briselli

The exhibition will remain open until February 16, 2020 in the Zaffanella room of the museum and is curated by Lorena Taddei, in collaboration with Roberto Cavaglià, Elisabetta Ghidini and Paolo Zani, and with photos by Luigi Briselli, translations by Silvia Tomasoni.

Bijou museum
Via Porzio 9, Casalmaggiore (Cremona)
Hours: Tuesday to Saturday: 10.00-12.00 / 15.00 – 18.00; Sunday and holidays: 3.00pm – 7.00pm
Entrance: full 3, euro; reduced 2.50

Spilla Becassine. Foto Luigi Briselli
Spilla Becassine. Foto Luigi Briselli
Spilla Cicala. Foto Luigi Briselli
Spilla Cicala. Foto Luigi Briselli
Spilla Clown. Foto Luigi Briselli
Spilla Clown. Foto Luigi Briselli
Spilla Demoiselle Volage. Foto Luigi Briselli
Spilla Demoiselle Volage. Foto Luigi Briselli

Spilla Helene Sabot. Foto Luigi Briselli
Spilla Helene Sabot. Foto Luigi Briselli







The history of Bulgari’s Serpents is on show in Venice






Looking at Venice from above, the Grand Canal has the sinuous shape of a snake. So what better place than the Lagunar city for an exhibition dedicated to Bulgari’s Serpenti? From December 4, 2019 to March 1, 2020 Venice, at the Fondaco dei Tedeschi, hosts an exhibition dedicated to the iconic jewel of the Roman Maison, now part of the LVMH group.

Bulgari, Serpenti, particolare
Bulgari, Serpenti, particolare

The exhibition is organized by Bulgari or, better with its brand Bvlgari and T Fondaco dei Tedeschi by DFS, the lifestyle department store in the heart of Venice. The exhibition is called Bvlgari Serpenti – Myth and Mastery and tells the story and unpublished aspects of the jewels that have fascinated many women, including divas like Liz Taylor.

Pubblicità di Bulgari con Liz Taylor
Pubblicità di Bulgari con Liz Taylor

The exhibition is organized in the environments of the Event Pavilion, on the fourth floor of the Fondaco and includes an excursus of the famous Serpenti Bvlgari creations, from the first more stylized models made with the Tubogas technique to the more realistic ones with gold flakes or enamelled polychrome will highlight. An evolution that still continues.
On five totems images of shots by great photographers have been installed who immortalized muses of the world of cinema and fashion with Bvlgari Serpenti creations of yesterday and today. On video panel, an anthology of historical images and works of art inspired by the myth of the snake will complete the story offering a meeting point and reflection in the different cultures of the world. All around, the motif of the scales of the snake will wrap the visitor favoring the immersion in a fascinating universe made of beauty, creativity and craftsmanship.

Serpenti bracelet-watch in gold with green enamel, emerald and diamonds, ca. 1965
Serpenti bracelet-watch in gold with green enamel, emerald and diamonds, ca. 1965

Emblem of seduction, rebirth and transformation, the symbol of the snake has been intertwined for centuries with the history of humanity, capturing its imaginary in the East as in the West. Since ancient times, the animal’s ability to renew itself by changing its skin, to remain in contact with the earth and at the same time to rise from it, to wind itself sinuously or to defeat threatening predators has fed myths and legends, inspiring artistic production in many fields .
In the 1940s, Bvlgari grasped the expressive power of this evocative sign, reinterpreting it for the first time in jewelery with supple bracelet watches that became, decade after decade, icons of his creativity.

Bvlgari advertising campaign form the 1970s
Bvlgari advertising campaign form the 1970s

Bvlgari’s snake-shaped watch bracelets have become a reference point for jewelery. They are characterized by the dial set in the head, studded with gems and with the golden strap that wraps the wrist.

Serpenti bracelet in gold with jade, rubies and diamonds, 1968 Orologio-bracciale Serpenti in oro con giada, rubini e diamanti, 1968 BVLGARI Heritage Collection
Serpenti bracelet in gold with jade, rubies and diamonds, 1968 Orologio-bracciale Serpenti in oro con giada, rubini e diamanti, 1968. BVLGARI Heritage Collection

The origin of the first watch bracelets is linked to the use of Bvlgari’s tubogas technique. The first specimens date back to the late forties and were in the shape of a highly stylized snake with spirals made either in the typical tubogas, or in a gold mesh that wrapped the wrist. The watch case and dial, usually square or rectangular, were placed at one end to evoke the snake’s head. The elegant sobriety of these creations was an immediate success in the post-war years, when the economic revival in Europe was still to come and the showy pieces were neither suitable nor affordable. Therefore, sought after accessories with a function, in harmony with the female desire to appear with a distinctive ornament at the expense of the monetary constraints that surrounded them.

Serpenti bracelet-watch in gold with polychrome enamel and emeralds, ca. 1967
Serpenti bracelet-watch in gold with polychrome enamel and emeralds, ca. 1967

In the following years, this kind of watch was seen in ever more varied and interesting versions exploring any kind of shape with regard to the case and the dial: round, square, octagonal, pear-shaped and with rounded edges, with or without a bezel diamonds. The case was positioned at the end or in the center of the spiral tubogas bracelet, and was itself made in every possible variant: steel, blackened steel or a combination of gold and steel. The mechanism was always of high quality: Audemars Piguet, Jaeger LeCoultre, Movado and Vacheron Constantin usually customized their mechanisms for Bvlgari, the logo of the person who customized the movement, appeared next to the logo on the dial.

The second half of the fifties saw the first models in which the snake was rendered in a realistic way, affirming the connection with the ancient tradition in a more explicit way. In Bvlgari’s snake-shaped watches from that period, the watch case was hidden in the snake’s head and the dial lay under a hinged cover at the top and center of the head.
Numerous particularly elaborate manufacturing elements formed the body: each link was hand-made in gold foil and were fixed together with welded gold pins or, in the case of glazed versions, screwed. The core was crossed by a spring made of white gold which ensured perfect flexibility.

Composit of Serpenti bracelet-watches from the 1960s, Bvlgari Heritage Collection
Composit of Serpenti bracelet-watches from the 1960s, Bvlgari Heritage Collection

The first animalier models were made exclusively in yellow gold with platinum heads and tails and decorated with diamonds. Elizabeth Taylor’s watch, immortalized on the actress’s wrist in a photograph taken on the Cleopatra set in 1962, is a magnificent example. The head of the snake is paved with diamonds with emerald eyes embellished with a crest made of marquis-shaped diamonds. Of course, in the following years numerous variants were produced, even without the watch itself. The body of the snake has always been in gold but the small scales of the snake of the first models have become larger, adorned with decorations of polygonal diamonds or with multicolored enamel in the most varied and bright combinations including turquoise and white, red and yellow , green, red, black and light blue and so on. Of these variants, for the Harlequin model, so called because it was characterized by four colors, an average of two hundred hours of work were required, being longer to be realized since it was necessary for each enamelled pigment to be cooked separately.

Pubblicità Bvlgari degli anni Settanta
Pubblicità Bvlgari degli anni Settanta

The procedure of enamelling the polygonal cavities that transformed the scales was a process that required a long and patient preparation of three days: the grinding of colored glass, the decantation of powders, washing, application, cooking, cooling and finish. Hard stones such as coral, turquoise, lapis lazuli or jade were also successfully adopted to create the scales, always generating strong color combinations. To complete such an intricate line, several stones were used to simulate the snake’s eyes. Yellow or colored diamonds, rubies, sapphires and emeralds with pear, marquis or circular shapes were used.

Amanda Wellsh by Gian Paolo Barbieri, 2016
Amanda Wellsh by Gian Paolo Barbieri, 2016

The lively animalier versions reflected the trends of society and customs of the sixties, when women showed a more self-confident attitude, reflecting deeply on their role in society and challenging conventions. Daring and charismatic, the Serpenti creations expressed a female attitude responsible for the laws that governed seduction, making fun of the traditional role of the “sinful woman.” Serpenti creations wrapped around the wrist immediately conveyed their belonging to the charismatic woman who wore them.

Benedetta Barzini by Gian Paolo Barbieri, 1968
Benedetta Barzini by Gian Paolo Barbieri, 1968

Diana Vreeland, the New York fashion judge, loved to wear her double-looped Bvlgari python belt as a necklace. Vreeland was so fascinated by the seductive power of snakes that in a 1968 memorandum addressed to his editorial staff he wrote: “Don’t forget the snake … the snake should be on every finger and around every wrist and everywhere.” Not by chance, fashion magazines began to offer shots made by masters of photography such as Gian Paolo Barbieri, Franco Rubartelli or Bret Stern with models wearing Bvlgari’s Serpenti creations in self-confident poses. Not surprisingly, an iconic Bvlgari advertising campaign of the seventies was characterized by a large B wrapped in numerous variants of the Serpenti models, further affirming the importance of this motif in the creative universe of the brand. In addition to the watch bracelets, over the years the Bvlgari Serpenti line has been enriched with necklaces, rings, belts, a gold clutch and with the development of the Maison’s range of accessories in the nineties, including sunglasses and fine leather bags. The snake motif has thus expressed and continues to express the multi-faceted creativity of the Maison, while at the same time containing the constant stylistic evolution. A centenary metaphor of transformation and rebirth, and there is no better animal to encapsulate the mystery of time.

BVLGARI Snakes. Myth and Mastery
Fondaco dei Tedeschi by DFS in collaboration with Bvlgari
DFS T Fondaco dei Tedeschi
From 4 December 2019 to 1 March 2020
Venice, Calle del Fontego dei Tedeschi (Rialto Bridge)
Time: 9.30 – 19.30
Reservation not required
Free entry






Van Cleef & Arpels in exhibition in Milan





In Milan, 400 jewels by Van Cleef & Arpels in a large exhibition that tells the story of the Parisian Maison ♦ ︎

The great, sparkling, imaginative world of Van Cleef & Arpels enclosed in the halls of an exhibition held in Milan. A unique opportunity to admire archival documents, line drawings and gouaches up close, as well as 400 jewels and watches, which tell the origins of the artistic creation of the Parisian Maison from 1906 to today.

Collana Zip, 1951
Collana Zip, 1951

The exhibition is scheduled for November 30, 2019 and will end on February 23, 2020 and promoted by the Municipality of Milan and produced by Van Cleef & Arpels, in collaboration with the Cologni Foundation. Set up at Palazzo Reale, the exhibition is curated by Alba Cappellieri, Professor of Jewelery Design and Accessory at the Milan Polytechnic and director of the Jewelery Museum of Vicenza. The jewels come from the Van Cleef & Arpels Collection and from private loans.
Collana Lion Barquerolles, 1971 Van Cleef & Arpels
Collana Lion Barquerolles, 1971 Van Cleef & Arpels

The exhibition also offers a special display, with a set designed by the American designer Johanna Grawunder, which is reflected in the rooms of the Appartamento dei Principi and the Sala degli Arazzi of the Milanese palace, which host the three sections in which the exhibition is divided: Time, Nature and Love. Themes that have always inspired Van Cleef & Arpels in creating pieces that have entered the history of jewelry, such as the clip with the dancer, the animals, the zip.
Collana Collerette, 1928, Patrick-Gries, Van Cleef & Arpels
Collana Collerette, 1928, Patrick-Gries, Van Cleef & Arpels

Alba Cappellieri has selected the key concepts through which to decode the creations of Van Cleef & Arpels and their relationship with time inspired by a work by Italo Calvino, Six proposals for the next millennium. The initial section on Time occupies ten rooms, dedicated to distinctive themes. The first room is consecrated in Paris, while the following ones are dedicated to the notion of Exoticism and to the five values ​​of Calvino: Lightness, Quickness, Visibility, Accuracy, Multiplicity. The last rooms of the section then focus on intersections with other disciplines such as dance, fashion and architecture.
In the heart of the exhibition, the section on Love presents creations, testimonies and love pledges, which were the expression of the strength of feelings and that accompanied some great passions of the twentieth century which have now become myths.
Clip Pivoine, 1937, Van Cleef & Arpels
Clip Pivoine, 1937, Van Cleef & Arpels

Finally, the last three rooms of the exhibition are dedicated to Nature with botany, flora and fauna. They reveal an enchanted world in which the artisan excellence of Van Cleef & Arpels and his search for harmony come together in an absolute art.
Clip Cinq feuilles, 1967 Van Cleef & Arpels
Clip Cinq feuilles, 1967 Van Cleef & Arpels

Van Cleef & Arpels: Time, Nature, Love
Palazzo Reale in Milan
from 30 November 2019 to 23 February 2020
Alba Cappellieri Curator
Exhibition promoted by the Municipality of Milan and the Royal Palace
Produced by Van Cleef & Arpels
In collaboration with the Cologni Foundation
Skira Editore Catalog
Hours Monday 14.30 – 19.30
Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and Sunday 9.30 – 19.30
Thursday and Saturday 9.30am – 10.30pm
Last entry one hour before closing
Festivities Saturday 7 December 9.30 – 22.30
Sunday 8 December 9.30 – 19.30
Tuesday 24 December 9.30 – 14.30
Wednesday 25 December 14.30 – 18.30
Thursday 26 December 9.30 – 22.30
Tuesday 31 December 9.30 – 14.30
Wednesday 1st January 2.30pm – 7.30pm
Monday 6 January 9.30 – 19.30
Last entry one hour before closing
Free admission
Locandina mostra
La locandina della mostra

The Milan Jewelery Week program

The Milan Jewelery Week program with 150 designer-artists and the Artistar Jewels competition ♦ ︎

We must congratulate Prodes, a company that organizes events of different types and its founder, Enzo Carbone. In seven years Artistar Jewels, which had started as a jewelery show-competition of avant-garde designers, has turned into a kermess up to the point of standing in a Jewelery Week (24-27 October) with many events scattered around the city.
This is not a replica of fairs dedicated to high jewelry, but the event seems to be able to attract interest and creatives from half the world.

L'edizione primaverile di Artistar Jewels a Palazzo Bovara
L’edizione primaverile di Artistar Jewels a Palazzo Bovara

Artistar Jewels remains at the center of the program. This is a collective exhibition of artists hosted at Palazzo Bovara (Corso di Porta Venezia 51, free admission).

Artistar Jewels is a project that has grown exponentially in recent years, gathering support from both insiders and a growing number of enthusiasts. The success of Artistar Jewels has allowed us to intercept the need to give the right emphasis to contemporary jewelery, in strong expansion in recent years, creating an entire week dedicated to it: hence the idea of ​​launching the first in Milan Jewelry Week.
Enzo Carbone, CEO of Prodes Italia

Chiara Passoni, bracciale
Chiara Passoni, bracciale

Among the over 500 applications received from all over the world, the curators of Artistar Jewels have selected 150 artists from 40 different countries, including Taiwan, Thailand, Lebanon, Armenia, Israel and Kuwait and a strong North American presence. In particular, the U.S. New York’s Export Assistance Center contacted the Diamond District Partnership, which organized a contest to give a New York artist the chance to attend the event with the support of this New York institution. The war of duties, in short, has not yet done damage in this sector.
Yuvsà Jewelry, Silverlight Rosé Sight Eyewear
Yuvsà Jewelry, Silverlight Rosé Sight Eyewear

Artistar Jewels in addition to the exhibition and editorial part, also realizes a competition, which was created with the aim of giving greater prominence to the artists who stood out among the already deserving participants. The jury of Artistar Jewels, chaired by Elisabetta Barracchia, director of Accessory Vogue Vanity Fair. We have already mentioned in another article the designer Gianni De Benedittis, who in collaboration with Artistar Jewels established the future prizeRemoto jewels, which consists of two sums of money that will be assigned, respectively, to a participant of Artistar Jewels and to a student of one of the schools participating in the Milano Jewelry Week, which will have distinguished themselves for their excellent mastery of the goldsmith’s technique and which will have taken into account the needs and trends of the fashion system.

Yael Kaduri, Compositions Series b
Yael Kaduri, Compositions Series b

It should be added that the pieces on display do not often resemble traditional jewels. The techniques used range from laser cutting to lost wax, from watermark to hand finishing, through 3D printing, increasingly widespread in this sector, as well as the use of materials, from year to year more green and the result of activities of recycling and upcycling. Also this year the works will end up in a book.

Artistar Jewel 2019 Fall Edition
Palazzo Bovara
C.so di Porta Venezia, 51
24-27 October 2019
Hours: 10:00 – 18:00 (open to the public – free admission)
Artist Night: October 24 at 16:00 (by invitation)

Here are the artists participating in the event:

Agmento – Mexico, Akeem Anishere, Anishere Designs Jewelers – Usa, Alberto Ercoli – Italy, Alessandro Dari – Italy, Alexandra Albini Jewels – Italy, Alfredo Cittadini – Italy, Alyssa A. – Russia, Amal Al-Ismaili – Shaabook – Oman, Anapsara – Italy – Spain, Andreia Gabriela Popescu – Romania, Angelica Centonze – Italy, Anja Berg – Chile, Anna Maccieri Rossi – Italy, Anna Maria Pitt – Iceland – Uk, Anna Nava-Liess, Anna Nava Handcrafted Jewelry – Usa, Anna Zycka – Poland, Annie Gobel – Australia, Arsxoias – Spain, Awu Fine Jewelry – China, Balazs Botos Design – Hungary, Belle Brooke Barer – Usa, Benedetta Barzanó Benbar – Italy, Bia Tambelli Creations – Italy, Carlotta Dasso – Italy, Cat Freaks – Mexico, Cecilia Lopez Bravo Jewelry – Usa, Cecilia Milazzo – Italy, Chiara Passoni Design – Italy, Chokolate Luxury – Spain, Christine Rio Of Slate Jewelry – Canada, Claude L.Creations – France, Constanza Bielsa – Chile, Cristina Cipolli Jewellery – Italy – Uk, Cristina Zilli – Italy, Darcy Miro – Usa, Deamatris – Italy, Debe Doris Berner – Switzerland, Deema Murad – Portugal, Diana Vas – Romania, Dieuwke Raats – The Netherlands, Eden Gedz – Israel, Edoardo Maria Maggiolo – Italy, Elena Lopez Jewelry – Mexico, Elena Tiberi – Italy, Eleonora Castagnetta Botta – Switzerland, Ellebi Gioielli – Italy, Ellence – Italy, Ely Milano Jewelry – The Netherlands, Emanuela Duca – Usa – Italy, Ewa Nowacka-Piechowiak Mandlas Jewellery To Enjoy – Poland, Fabiana Fusco – Italy, Falcon Feather – Usa, Ferunas – Sweden, Fragiliadesign: Emozioni Libere Da Omologazioni – Italy, Francesca Mo Jewels Designer – Italy, Gioielli Dalla Terra – Italy, Gioielli Donati – Italy, Hanna Kowalska – Poland, Hard To Find – Mexico, Hawraa Almaqseed And Mohammed Khesroh – Kuwait, Hennie Broers Zilverkunst – The Netherlands, Henrike Altes – Germany, Ilaria De Lorenzi – Italy, Iren Bznuní – Spain, Irene Palomar – Argentina, Iulia Ivan – Romania, J.Noelle – Usa, Jewels By Jacqueline Massawe – Tanzania, John Farris – Usa, Jolanta Gazda – Poland, Jouel Bar By Parmida – Usa, Juwelieren Eren Sahan Bagci – Turkey, Kasia I Coal You. – Poland, Kathryn Cronin Jewellery Designs – Canada, Kazakova Olga Formeconept – Russia, L. Skelly – Canada, Latod De Lucia Jewels – Italy, Laura Forte- Italy, Leonor Silva Jewellery – Portugal, Lisi Fracchia – Spain, Little Thing – Russia, Lorenzo Pepe – Italy, Luciana & Yasmim – Brazil, Lucy Spink Jewellery – Uk, Lunante – Italy, Lyra – Croatia, Magmalab – Italy, Maia Merav Holtzman – Usa, Mando Bee – Usa, Manifesto Jewelery By Martin Ortiz – Usa, Maracole Bijoux – Usa, Margery Hirschey – Usa,  Margherita Forgione Jewels – Italy, María Blondet – Usa, Maria Louise High- Usa, Maria Samora – Usa, Mary Arrieta Designer – Mexico, May Gañán – Spain, Michelle Y. Yun- Usa, Midori Jewels & Design- Italy, Miriam Nori – Italy, Mitty Jo Jewellery Studio – Portugal, Mizuki Tochigi – Uk – Japan, Morena Fregonese Of Maitai Jewels – Italy, Motcaché- Italy, Myungsun Sung – South Korea, Nami Chubachi – Australia – Japan, Natalie Barhoum- Israel, Nita Angeletti – Usa, Olga Van Doorn Jewelry – The Netherlands, Palladingold™& Tatyana Kholodnova – Russia, Parè Gioielli – Italy, Paula Di Dario – Brazil, Petra Mohylova – Czech Republique, Pickmeordie. – Taiwan, Pin-Device Lucia Petracca Alessandra Mazzeo – Italy, Queenie Cao – China, Rascha Daher – Lebanon, Rayan Lynch Gioielli D’arte – Italy, Roberta Mattos – Brazil, Ryunosuke Suginaka – Japan, Saadah – Saudi Arabia, Sanaz Babakhani For Fratelli Piccini – Italy, Sarran – Thailand, Saskia Shutt Designs – Belgium, Shaolinyifan – Jewelry. Art. Design. – China, Sharon Khazzam – Usa, Shavarsh Hakobian – Armenia, Sibilla Santucci – Italy, Silvia Omodei – Italy, Slawa Tchorzewska – Poland, Sofie Stal – Soinflow- The Netherlands, Sofya Briantseva – Russia, Soledad Lowe – Usa, Sonia Birndt Carrascosa – Spain, Sowon Joo – South Korea, Spinelli Gioielli – Italy, Stkreo By Stefania Tortella – Italy, Sula Italyn Design – Italy, Susan Lenart- Usa, Tehila Designs By Veronica Umoetuk – Uk, Telma Aguiar Jewelry – Brazil, Tetyana Kalyuzyna – Ukraine, The Godhead Jewellery – Italy, Tracy Trainor Jewellery – Ireland, Valerie Jo Coulson – Usa, Vanessa Pederzani – Uk, Weinan Pan – Uk, Wendy Yothers – Usa, Xiaohui Yang – China, Yael Kaduri – Israel, Yael Magnes – Usa, Yukie Shirakawa – France – Japan, Yuvsà / Yutian Tao – Usa

Eden Gedz, A Messy Flower Necklace
Eden Gedz, A Messy Flower Necklace
Elena Tiberi, Jewelry Earrings
Elena Tiberi, Jewelry Earrings
MagmaLab, necklace
MagmaLab, necklace

Queenie Cao, Glasses Necklace
Queenie Cao, Glasses Necklace







The latest from Wallace Chan





The new creations by Wallace Chan, with his indestructible ceramic, on show in London ♦ ︎

The teacher. The artist. The innovator. Wallace Chan is all three of these definitions at the same time. For example, just a couple of years ago he developed an incredible indestructible porcelain and five times harder than steel, a material that allows him to create jewelry, but also sculptures, which could not be made with other materials.

Wallace Chan, anello con ceramica e zaffiri
Wallace Chan, anello con ceramica e zaffiri

And for the European public, Wallace Chan presents some of his most recent (and rarefied) jewelry creations in London. The exhibition is entitled Shapeshifter: The Multiverse of Wallace Chan (September 14-17, Asia House). It is also the third and final stage of this traveling exhibition, over time arrived at 20 pieces, with unbreakable porcelain. In addition, the exhibition includes ten large titanium sculptures, the metal favorite of the Hong Kong artist-jeweler. Another invention of the jeweler is the Wallace Cut, a technique of engraving in a transparent stone or crystal, which combines faceting and carving techniques. The result of this delicate work is a multidimensional optical illusion, which reveals four additional images of the incision if they are observed on the front face.
Lotus Children, scultura in titanio
Lotus Children, scultura in titanio

Some of these pieces have already been presented in New York and Hong Kong, others are new. Among the most interesting pieces is the Garden of Dreams pin, which uses porcelain that is repeatedly carved and baked. The filaments of the flower are in blue-green titanium and the anthers are made with red precious stones. The first creation with the special porcelain is, instead, a ring entitled A New Creation, which combines white porcelain with blue sapphire, aquamarines and pavé diamonds. Federico Graglia





Memories From Death to Life, scultura di Wallace Chan
Memories From Death to Life, scultura di Wallace Chan

Spilla Garden of Dreams
Spilla Garden of Dreams

Spilla Mind Puzzle
Spilla Mind Puzzle

Wallace Chan qualche anno fa. Photo: Christie's
Wallace Chan qualche anno fa. Photo: Christie’s







The Vanity Affaires by Christie’s





Cases for make-up created by the great jewelery houses in an exhibition organized by Christie’s ♦ ︎

Memorabilia related to the world of luxury. Or, more precisely, of what surround it. In September, from Wednesday 11 to Thursday 16 Christie’s organized an exhibition in Paris curated by the jewelery department of the largest auction house. The exhibition is called A Vanity Affair and will bring together 75 luxurious make-up cases created by the largest jewelry houses of Place Vendôme. The cases, which are real jewels, were bought and preserved by a couple of enthusiasts (who prefer to remain anonymous), who assembled them with love, taste and patience over the years, reaching 160 pieces.

Jean Schlumberger per Ttiffany, 1956, portacipria in oro, peridoto, turchesi
Jean Schlumberger per Ttiffany, 1956, portacipria in oro, peridoto, turchesi

In my fifty years in the auction business, I have seen and handled many collections by couples, from intimate mementos of private individuals to the joint property of such legends as Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, and Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Bergé. These usually started off as gifts to each other on special occasions, and as the collection grew, advanced to a more proactive and serious endeavor, often with treasures covering expansive periods, styles, and regions. The magic potion in these collections is the emotion. This is a lifelong love affair between two people, and their love affair with beauty and refinement.
François Curiel, president of Christie’s Europe

Box art déco con corallo, lapislazzuli, smalto e diamanti
Box art déco con corallo, lapislazzuli, smalto e diamanti

The same passion pushed the couple to assemble one of the most important private collections of Vanity and Minaudiere cases, retracing the evolution of the art of necessity from the 18th century to the middle of the 20th century. The collection records the evolution of taste between the two world wars and the alternating fortunes of politics and finance. It is also a hymn to the craftsmanship of the greatest jewelry houses, which have created these accessories for “modern women”. In fact, Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels and Lacloche Frères hold a very special place in this collection along with Boucheron, Tiffany & Co, Fabergé and Black Starr & Frist, among others.
Vanity case art déco in madreperla, turchese, lapislazzuli, lacca. Cartier 1929
Vanity case art déco in madreperla, turchese, lapislazzuli, lacca. Cartier 1929

Opening one of these boxes, is like unveiling their intimate secrets, diving into their universe and going back in time. Traveling to Paris, London or New York, crossing paths with the different personalities from elites and café society: aristocrats, designers, heiresses, pashas.
Lyne Kaddoura, writer of the book A Vanity Affair

The collection includes pieces that were previously owned by personalities such as Suzanne Belperron, Anna Gould duchess of Talleyrand Perogord, her niece Diane de Castellane, Rachel Bunny Mellon, Pasha el Glaoui, Doris Duke.

Minaudière art déco in lacca, platino e diamanti. Van Cleef et Arpels 1935
Minaudière art déco in lacca, platino e diamanti. Van Cleef et Arpels 1935

Between the Twenties and Fifties almost all the main jewelery maisons supplied an elite clientele with these small boxes in gold and silver, decorated with diamonds, colored gems, jade and coral, and determined by the aesthetics of the day, reflecting many distinctive styles, Belle Époque, Art Deco, Oriental or Retro. But the mechanical aspect is also to be admired, with hidden hinges and layered compartments.
During the exhibition the book Vanity Affair will be available, 336 richly illustrated pages, published by Rizzoli. Federico Graglia

Exhibition: from 11 to 16 September, from 10 to 18
Christie’s: 9 avenue Matignon, 75008 Paris

Vanity case art déco, in smalto, madreperla e diamanti. Cartier 1925
Vanity case art déco, in smalto, madreperla e diamanti. Cartier 1925

Vanity case di Boucheron in smalto, madreperla e diamanti
Vanity case di Boucheron in smalto, madreperla e diamanti

Porta sigarette in argento , smalto e guscio d'uovo di Jean Trotain 1930
Porta sigarette in argento , smalto e guscio d’uovo di Jean Trotain 1930

Porta sigarette art déco  in smalto, diamanti. Lacloche Frères 1925
Porta sigarette art déco in smalto, diamanti. Lacloche Frères 1925







The story of Tiffany in Shanghai





Tiffany tells its story in the Vision & Virtuosity exhibition in Shanghai ♦

Telling to Chinese people, and not only, what the Tiffany brand means. The medium for this strategic operation is Vision & Virtuosity, an exhibition organized in Shanghai by the largest jewelry company in the world. The exhibition, which celebrates the greatest creative masterpieces of legendary American jewelry, is not organized in China by accident.
Right at the beginning of June, Tiffany reduced its earnings forecasts for 2019 after recording a sharp drop in purchases by tourists, particularly Chinese ones, which caused a decline in quarterly sales on a comparable basis. On that occasion, Tiffany also specified that the forecasts depend on a number of factors, including the increasing duties on jewelry that the company exports from the United States to China.

Tiffany, Fifth Avenue, New York, in occasione del lancio della collezione Paper Flowers
Tiffany, Fifth Avenue, New York, in occasione del lancio della collezione Paper Flowers

The Vision & Virtuosity exhibition seems to be an answer to relaunch the brand: it was conceived as a journey through history, an exploration of the codes of the brand and a look at the future, a tribute to the past of New York society. Shanghai, a global capital that boasts a rich cultural heritage and international influence, is the ideal location for an exhibition of this caliber aimed at the Cina.

Alessandro Bogliolo, ceo di Tiffany
Alessandro Bogliolo, ceo di Tiffany

Vision & Virtuosity is a tribute to Tiffany & Co., synonymous with great craftsmanship and innovative design since Charles Lewis Tiffany founded the company in New York in 1837. These two values, vision and virtuosity, are the essence from Tiffany & Co. and this exhibition represents the best of our brand.
Alessandro Bogliolo, Chief Executive Officer of Tiffany & Co

Vision & Virtuosity transports visitors to a world full of imagination and presents the most important creations of the Tiffany Archives. The installations of the exhibition contextualize the moments of great innovation of the brand, documenting the countless first times of Tiffany, such as the introduction of the modern engagement ring, the Tiffany Setting.

“In the Tiffany Archives there are many incredible objects from which we draw inspiration and we continually find new ways to reinvent them and reinterpret them for our models of today. With this exhibition we honor the past and show how beauty and craftsmanship are timeless and always very important, “adds Reed Krakoff, Chief Artistic Officer of Tiffany.

Tiffany & Co. Vision & Virtuosity exhibition. Photo: Tiffany & Co
Tiffany & Co. Vision & Virtuosity exhibition. Photo: Tiffany & Co

The exhibition path is divided into six chapters.

Blue Is the Color of Dreams
Tiffany Blue, the blue of robin’s eggs, is the protagonist of a room, which highlights the iconic color used in jewelry and in the Tiffany brand and its important presence as a cultural icon. In the room, which pays tribute to the discovery and use of colored gemstones in the Tiffany tradition, you can admire gems such as Montana sapphires and tanzanites — blue-purple stones that Tiffany presented to the world in 1968.

Gioielli Tiffany in mostra
Gioielli Tiffany in mostra

The World of Tiffany
A visual testimony of how broad Tiffany’s representation in popular culture is, The World of Tiffany shows Tiffany’s iconic influence in film, television, music and literature. This space tells the evolution of the Tiffany Blue Box, the construction of the flagship store on Fifth Avenue in New York, the influential characters who wore Tiffany jewels and other important moments that made Tiffany a place that gives joy through her creations spectacular.

Lady Gaga con il Tiffany Diamond
Lady Gaga con il Tiffany Diamond

The Tiffany Blue Book
Visitors will discover the innovation and skill that characterize the high jewelry pieces of the Blue Book collections. In this room you can admire the original Blue Book of 1845, the first mail-order catalog in the United States, the exceptional creations of Jean Schlumberger and Elsa Peretti. A room that tells the story of the evolution of design and craftsmanship that have characterized Tiffany’s creativity for almost two centuries, reaching the jewels of the Blue Book collections designed by the current Chief Artistic Officer of Tiffany & Co. Reed Krakoff .

Tiffany Blue Book, bracciale flessibile in platino con piastre a vortice, diamanti taglio tondo e baguette
Tiffany Blue Book, bracciale flessibile in platino con piastre a vortice, diamanti taglio tondo e baguette

Tiffany Love
Tiffany has always created jewels that celebrate relationships and the way people express their feelings through love symbols. The jewels in this room offer a glimpse of Tiffany’s important role in the greatest love stories in the world, through creations such as the first modern engagement ring, the Tiffany Setting, and the recently presented Tiffany True.
Anello solitario in platino e diamante con il Tiffany Setting
Anello solitario in platino e diamante con il Tiffany Setting

Breakfast at Tiffany’s
No other film has played an equally important role in consolidating Tiffany’s appeal in popular culture as much as Breakfast at Tiffany’s. This chapter of the show takes visitors behind the scenes of the film with exclusive items such as the original script with Audrey Hepburn’s personal annotations and photos of the set in the Fifth Avenue flagship store.
Copione di Breakfast at Tiffany’s , trascrizione di Paramount Pictures e annotazioni di Audrey Hepburn® (1960-1961). Audrey Hepburn® - Trademark and Likeness property of Sean Hepburn Ferrer and Luca Dotti – All Rights Reserved. Photo credit: The Tiffany Archives
Copione di Breakfast at Tiffany’s , trascrizione di Paramount Pictures e annotazioni di Audrey Hepburn® (1960-1961).
Audrey Hepburn® – Trademark and Likeness property of Sean Hepburn Ferrer and Luca Dotti – All Rights Reserved. Photo credit: The Tiffany Archives

Diamonds: Miracles of Nature
In this room visitors are invited to discover the most precious and important diamonds of Tiffany. Diamonds: Miracles of Nature pays tribute to Tiffany’s authority in the field of diamonds in different eras, from the Gilded Age to the Art Deco period to contemporary models. The show culminates with the most precious jewel of the brand, the Tiffany Diamond. This fancy yellow 128.54 carat diamond, which has long been a source of inspiration and starting point for the Tiffany jewelry collections, is undoubtedly one of the most important gemstones in the world.
Audrey Hepburn in «Colazione da Tiffany»
Audrey Hepburn in «Colazione da Tiffany», davanti alle vetrine del negozio di New York

Vision & Virtuosity will open to the public from September 23 to November 10, 2019 in Shanghai, China, at the Fosun Foundation Shanghai. Tickets will go on sale from the beginning of September, and the proceeds from the sale of all tickets will go to the Fosun Foundation and its philanthropic programs.






Chaumet’s tiaras on exhibition




The famous Chaumet tiaras, and other jewels, on display in the Principality of Monaco ♦

La Maison Chaumet, one of the great names in jewelery, from 1780 to today has created over 2000 tiaras. For queens, aristocratic families, or simply for women who want to wear a special jewel and, of course, they are lucky enough to have a partner who gives them a tiara or a diadem. In fact, once tiaras were reserved for princesses and queens, while now they are a jewel that can be worn by all women on special occasions, such as marriage. In the art of tiara, they explain to Chaumet, everything starts with a drawing. Over the years, Chaumet’s tiaras have thus interpreted the style of romanticism, naturalism, Belle Époque and Art Déco. Now the Maison boasts 400,000 archive drawings and a Salon des Diadèmes, a showcase of Chaumet’s historical collections.

Diadema trasformabile con motivo a giglio appartenuto alla famiglia Leuchtenberg, discendenti dell'imperatrice Giuseppina, 1830. Il grande solitario di smeraldo esagonale può essere indossato come una spilla
Diadema trasformabile con motivo a giglio appartenuto alla famiglia Leuchtenberg, discendenti dell’imperatrice Giuseppina, 1830. Il grande solitario di smeraldo esagonale può essere indossato come una spilla

A heritage that has been traveling the world for a couple of years in an exhibition, which now arrives in the Principality of Monaco, after having passed through Beijing and Tokyo. The exhibition is called Chaumet in Majesty, Jewels of Sovereigns since 1780 and is organized at the Grimaldi Forum in Monaco. Who wants to dream, can see up close tiaras exceptional among 250 jewels of sovereigns, some of which exposed for the first time to the public.

Chaumet in Majesty, Jewels of Sovereigns since 1780
from 12 July to 28 August 2019
Grimaldi Forum in Monaco




Aigrette soleil rayonnant, in platino, smeraldo, diamanti. eno formale della tiara, l'aigrette offre comunque un'aria di festa e allunga la silhouette. Grassetto senza ostentazione, un'alternativa alle stelle e alle crescenti popolari della fine del XIX secolo, il Soleil fu introdotto da Chaumet intorno al 1900
Aigrette soleil rayonnant, in platino, smeraldo, diamanti. eno formale della tiara, l’aigrette offre comunque un’aria di festa e allunga la silhouette. Grassetto senza ostentazione, un’alternativa alle stelle e alle crescenti popolari della fine del XIX secolo, il Soleil fu introdotto da Chaumet intorno al 1900
Diadema Fleurs pensée
Diadema Fleurs pensée, circa 1850, oro, argento e diamanti
Diadema Boccioli di rosa, oro bianco, diamanti, perle
Diadema Boccioli di rosa, oro bianco, diamanti, perle
Diadème aux épis de blé (spighe di grano)
Diadème aux épis de blé (spighe di grano)
Collana Bayadère, Chaumet, Parigi, circa 1920, di Joseph Chaumet. Platino, diamanti, zaffiri e perle
Collana Bayadère, Chaumet, Parigi, circa 1920, di Joseph Chaumet. Platino, diamanti, zaffiri e perle
Chaumet, tiara in platino e diamanti
Chaumet, tiara in platino e diamanti
Spilla con diamante centrale a goccia
Spilla con diamante centrale a goccia
Spilla Fuchsia di Chaumet in diamanti fucsia realizzata nel 1840 sotto la direzione di Jean-Baptiste Fossin. Argento su oro con diamanti en tremblant
Spilla Fuchsia di Chaumet in diamanti fucsia realizzata nel 1840 sotto la direzione di Jean-Baptiste Fossin. Argento su oro con diamanti en tremblant
Spilla-aigrette Lune croissante, con diamanti e perle
Spilla-aigrette Lune croissante, con diamanti e perle







Bulgari, jewels on display





Spectacular jewelry by Bulgari in an exhibition in Italy dedicated to the Roman Maison ♦ ︎

Not everyone knows that the origin of the Bulgari name derives from the fact that the historic jewelry Maison, which is now part of the LVMH group, was founded in Bulgaria. But it happened a long time ago: in 1884. Bulgari was founded by the Greek silversmith Sotirios Voulgaris, who arrived in Italy and became Sotirio Bulgari. Many years have passed and Bulgari has become an icon of luxury, capable of creating exceptional jewels.

Bracciale Serpenti in oro bianco e diamanti
Bracciale Serpenti in oro bianco e diamanti

Now the most beautiful jewels of the Bulgari Heritage collection, including those belonging to the divas of the Dolce Vita, will be exhibited from June 26 (inauguration on the 25th) until November 3rd, in the exhibition entitled Bulgari, the story, the dream, hosted by two locations Museum Center of Lazio, Castel Sant’Angelo and Palazzo Venezia.

Collana con rubellite, tormaline,  granati, peridoti, diamanti
Collana con rubellite, tormaline, granati, peridoti, diamanti

The project was conceived by the Polo Museale del Lazio, directed by Edith Gabrielli, in collaboration with Bulgari and created through contents selected by a scientific committee composed of exponents of the academic world such as Francesco Benigno (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa), Chiara Ottaviano (historian and sociologist of mass communication), Daniela Luigia Caglioti (University Federico II of Naples), Emanuela Scarpellini (University of Milan). The themes related to style and creativity were developed by Lucia Boscaini, Bulgari brand and heritage curator. Curated by Chiara Ottaviano, the exhibition traces the history of Bulgari as an example of success in luxury.





L'allestimento curato da Chiara Ottaviano
L’allestimento curato da Chiara Ottaviano

Collana con diamanti e rubini
Collana con diamanti e rubini

Bulgari, collier con rubini, zaffiri, lapis, diamanti
Bulgari, collier con rubini, zaffiri, lapis, diamanti

Collier con zaffiri, rubini, smeraldi, diamanti
Collier con zaffiri, rubini, smeraldi, diamanti
Collana Serpenti con ametista, smeraldi, turchesi e diamanti
Collana Serpenti con ametista, smeraldi, turchesi e diamanti

Bracciale in oro rosa, madreperla, diamanti
Bracciale in oro rosa, madreperla, diamanti







Jean Schlumberger in Paris with Tiffany




In Paris, Tiffany organizes an exhibition of one hundred jewels by Jean Schlumberger ♦

Jean Schlumberger, one of the jewels gods. Tiffany dedicates a four-week exhibition to him, with a hundred jewels, including 80 unique pieces, starting from June 12th. The pieces can be purchased and can be booked in any Tiffany boutique. The sales exhibition is organized in the Champs-Élysées boutique.
The great designer, to whom the American Maison has also dedicated a book, was in fact one of the greatest men creative of jewelery, and he worked in particular for Tiffany.
French, Alsatian from Mulhouse, a town on the border with Germany and Switzerland, Schlumberger has had two fortunes: the first is the survive from the terrible battle of Dunkerque, during the Second World War. The other was to meet Tiffany’s president, Walter Hoving, in 1956.

Spilla a forma di delfino in oro, smeraldi, diamanti firmata da Jean Schlumberger per Tiffany
Spilla a forma di delfino in oro, smeraldi, diamanti firmata da Jean Schlumberger per Tiffany

After the war and the brief military career, in fact, the designer had moved to New York to design clothes for Chez Ninon. In 1946, however, it had already turned into a jeweler with its own Maison. But it is with Tiffany that his fame takes off, started with the Bird on a Rock brooch, with a large fancy yellow diamond. Transferred from Tiffany, where he had his own laboratory and a private elevator, Schlumberger worked for the Maison until the end of the 1970s (he was born in 1907 and passed away in 1987) and in recent years he was also vice president of Tiffany.

Bird on a Rock, spilla con un diamante fancy yellow
Bird on a Rock, spilla con un diamante fancy yellow

Schlumberger is a figure that has entered the history of jewelry, with works that have remained famous, such as his jewels inspired by sea creatures and other animals. Jacqueline Kennedy wore so many Schlumberger bracelets that the press nicknamed them Jackie bracelets. He was also one of four jewelers to whom Tiffany allowed to sign his work, along with Paloma Picasso, Elsa Peretti and Frank Gehry. Federico Graglia





Collana che fa parte di una suite firmata Van Cleef & Arpels, in diamanti e peridoti. Parte della collezione Rockefeller
Bracciale con diamanti e acquamarine di Jean Schlumberger per Tiffany, parte della collezione Rockefeller. Venduta per 250.000 dollari

Bracciale e spilla con zaffiri e diamanti di Jean Schlumberger per Tiffany
Bracciale e spilla con zaffiri e diamanti di Jean Schlumberger per Tiffany

Spilla con zaffiri e diamanti di Tiffany, design du Schlumberger
Spilla con zaffiri e diamanti di Tiffany, design du Schlumberger

Jasmine, collana di Jean Schlumberger del 1966
Jasmine, collana di Jean Schlumberger del 1966

Bracciale in oro 18 carati e smalto
Bracciale in oro 18 carati e smalto di Jean-Schlumberger

Collana appartenuta a Carroll Petrie, di Schlumberger per Tiffany, venduta per 905mila dollari
Collana appartenuta a Carroll Petrie, di Schlumberger per Tiffany, venduta per 905mila dollari







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