orario

Antonella Ferrara’s unique pieces




Gold, silver, natural stones and pearls, with the ambition of becoming wearable sculptures. They are the result of the work of Antonella Ferrara, who has a long (35 years) activity behind her. After studying goldsmith sculpture in Milan, Antonella Ferrara creates jewels in her studio-laboratory. At the center of her creative universe is the creation of micro-sculptures using gems and opals. They are all unique pieces with decorative, figurative elements that evoke modern symbols and historical references and constitute a thematic segment of her production, linked to her artistic experience.

Anello in oro con rubino
Anello in oro con rubino

Necklaces, bracelets, earrings, rings and brooches are inspired by wide-ranging themes, such as the Galaxia collection, or Treasures of the Sea, Ancestralia, but also the Wonders of the Earth. An example of the sources of inspiration is the mother-of-pearl medallion with a fantasy figure and inspired by the mythological element of the Greek divinity Aschepio, Aesculapius in Latin, symbol of health sciences and wisdom.
Collana con pendente in argento e oro, smalto
Collana con pendente in argento e oro, smalto

Anello con diamanti e perla scaramazza
Anello con diamanti e perla scaramazza
Orecchini Ethnos con oro e perle
Orecchini Ethnos con oro e perle
Medaglione con oro e madreperla
Medaglione con oro e madreperla
Orecchini con gocce di opale e oro sabbiato
Orecchini con gocce di opale e oro sabbiato

Anello di Antonella Ferrara
Anello di Antonella Ferrara







The jewels of ancient Egypt in Vicenza




Ancient Egyptian women also wore bracelets, necklaces and rings, which were often associated with amulets. Now some of the jewels of that culture that continues to fascinate after thousands of years are collected in an exhibition (from 23 December 2022 to 7 May 2023) at the Museo del Gioiello in Vicenza. In the halls of the museum, the exhibition displays scarabs, lotus flowers or the typical eye of Horus in the form of an amulet, terracotta necklaces and bracelets, strings of pearls and ivory rings, seals with the name of the pharaoh. They are jewels that were commonly used, as evidenced by paintings, reliefs and the analysis of the equipment of some mummies. In short, the ancient Egyptians were just as vain as humans are today.

Amuleto Occhio di Horo
Amuleto Occhio di Horo

And the exhibition entitled Jewels and Amulets. Beauty in Ancient Egypt, curated by the director of the Egyptian Museum of Turin, Christian Greco, with the collaboration of the museum curators Paolo Marini and Cédric Gobeil, is an interesting opportunity to discover the taste of that era for jewelry. The museum space, managed by the Italian Exhibition Group (the company that organizes Vicenzaoro) together with the Municipality of Vicenza is located inside the Basilica Palladiana, in the city center, and usually houses a permanent exhibition with jewels that have made history, as well as to temporary events.

Interno del Museo del Gioiello
Interno del Museo del Gioiello

Visiting hours of the Jewelery Museum
from Tuesday to Friday from 10:00 to 13:00 and from 15:00 to 18:00
Saturday and Sunday from 10:00 to 18:00.
www.museodelgioiello.it

Un'immagine della mostra al Museo del Gioiello
Un’immagine della mostra al Museo del Gioiello

Locandina della mostra Gioielli e amuleti. La bellezza nell’Antico Egitto
Locandina della mostra Gioielli e amuleti. La bellezza nell’Antico Egitto

L'esposizione permanente al Museo del Gioiello di Vicenza
L’esposizione permanente al Museo del Gioiello di Vicenza

Maschera funeraria esposta al Museo Egizio di Torino, dettaglio
Maschera funeraria esposta al Museo Egizio di Torino, dettaglio






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






A jewel contemporary to design in Milan





In Milan, jewelry and art at the Rossini Gallery on the occasion of Design Week ♦ ︎

For a week, every year, Milan becomes the capital of design. Salone del Mobile (in the spaces of the Fair) and Fuorisalone (the exhibitions in the city) attract crowds and operators from all over the world. The proposal of the Rossini Gallery is also punctual, which organizes the exhibition Outsidelounge 2019. Gioiello Contemporaneo, on the occasion of the design week. Even the jewel, in fact, is the result of design, in particular that which comes from a link with the world of contemporary art. In short, jewels, but of research, unique pieces.

Calcagnini Gioielli
Calcagnini Gioielli

The exhibition will be open from 9 to 20 April, in collaboration with the curators Marina Chiocchetta and Sonia Patrizia Catena. The jewels are heterogeneous, born from the research and creativity of Italian and foreign designers, goldsmiths and artists. Pieces not necessarily created to be worn, but like small sculptures. The jewels on display focus on two main strands: the so-called biomorphic language, that is, of a formal imitation of nature, or on the study of regular geometric shapes linked to the world of architecture.

Simone Vera, Bath, bracciale in bronzo e argento
Simone Vera, Bath, bracciale in bronzo e argento

Amoridoro, Giovanna Bittante, Silvia Borghi, Calcagnini Jewelry, Glauco Cambi, Marina Cappellano, Dario Scapitta Design, Claudine Dupeyron, Sabrina Formica, Rosanna Frapporti, Genos Jewelry, JewelryGreen, Lakeobject, Lunante, Erica Magliano, Maragisca, Marcia Lima, Monreale Jewels, MyriamB, Fifth Essence, Ridolfi Francesco, Flavia Rivetti, Simone Vera Bath, Werner Altinger
The authors present in the exhibition

Opera di Silvia Borghi
Opera di Silvia Borghi

There will also be a selection of artist’s jewels from another project, Redefinire il Gioiello, now in its seventh edition and of which the gallery has been a partner since 2012. The winners of the Rossini Prize proclaimed by the artistic director Marina Chiocchetta will be exhibited. The gallery has chosen seven worthy artists for research, technique and originality: Genos by Adriana del Duca, Vanessa Kubach, Lalì creative leather, Emilie Le Dez, Daniela Luzzu, Studiozero glass by Caterina Zucchi, Qèc by Mariantonietta Davoli.

The exhibition, which will open to the public on the occasion of the Fuorisalone on Tuesday 9 April, will be open until 20 April 2019, from Tuesday to Saturday 10.00 am to 7.00 pm. The meeting with the artists is scheduled for Saturday 13th at 4:00 pm.





Glauco Cambi
Glauco Cambi

Marina Cappellano
Marina Cappellano
Dario Scapitta, Euklidea, Blue triangle
Dario Scapitta, Euklidea, Blue triangle
Sabrina Formica
Sabrina Formica
Genos Gioielli, Katana
Genos Gioielli, Katana
Lakeobject, orecchini Ventaglio
Lakeobject, orecchini Ventaglio
Lunante, Inclusioni
Lunante, Inclusioni
Erica Magliano, Organic artefice
Erica Magliano, Organic artefice
Maragisca Design Lab
Maragisca Design Lab
Monreale Gioielli
Monreale Gioielli
Quinta Essenza, spilla Oxidised Lichen
Quinta Essenza, spilla Oxidised Lichen
Francesco Ridolfi, collezione Skycity of Bhujerba
Francesco Ridolfi, collezione Skycity of Bhujerba

Flavia Rivetti, Emmaus
Flavia Rivetti, Emmaus







High jewelery on show in Valenza




In Valenza the high jewelery techniques become a traveling exhibition ♦ ︎
It is said that Valenza is the capital of high jewelery in Italy. The truth is that not all the fine jewelry is made in the Piedmontese city, but a lot yes. The ancient Valenza goldsmith’s tradition is now shown through the Valenza exhibition. The art and technology of the jewel between past, present and future (23-25 ​​February 2018). The eighteenth-century Villa Gropella will host the first and unprecedented stage, because it is a traveling exhibition. The exhibition is curated by Giansante Gioielli, a local reality in the sector and allows you to observe the techniques of processing fine jewelry from within. “With this precious review our reality intends to enhance the goldsmith’s art, indissolubly linked to the territory of Valenza, today as yesterday”, comments Marcello Giansante.
The exhibition shows the local artisan production, retracing its evolution through the exhibition of photographs, objects and writings that narrate the extraordinary work of the skilled craftsmen of this area, known in the world for its refined artifacts and now become a reference point of international goldsmith production. In fact, very often, one is not aware of the creative process behind a precious jewel. “Shops capable of processing precious stones and metals are today a very important cultural and not only economic heritage”, adds Giansante. “We want this art to be exalted and, for this reason, we have created an exhibition project that enhances know-how. The great precision and manual skill, as well as imagination and creativity, handed down, with his gestures and his tools, from generation to generation, from master to apprentice, are the elements that can be discovered during the exhibition” .
Valenza. The art and technology of jewelry between past, present and future
23 – 25 February 2018 from 10.00am to 6.00pm
Villa Gropella – Road to Solero, 8 – Valenza (Alessandria)
Free entry
www.gioielleriagiansante.it/mostra
Tel. +39 0362 907354




Immagine dalla mostra Valenza. L’arte e la tecnologia del gioiello tra passato, presente e futuro
Immagine dalla mostra Valenza. L’arte e la tecnologia del gioiello tra passato, presente e futuro

Lavorazione con lo stampo
Lavorazione con lo stampo
Lavorazione dei gioielli
Lavorazione dei gioielli
Bracciali a molla di Giansante Gioielli
Bracciali a molla di Giansante Gioielli
Controllo qualità
Controllo qualità

Villa Gropella, a Valenza
Villa Gropella, a Valenza







Persia of jewels on exhibition




The jewels of ancient and modern Persia at the Bijou Museum of Casalmaggiore ♦ ︎
Persia is not just one of a thousand and one night. And it is not just the one that is sometimes read in the chronicles of geopolitics. There is also a Persia that has a millennial culture, which is also expressed with jewelery. Who is curious to know what art jewelry manufacture in Iran there are now, can go to visit an exhibit set up in the Bijou Museum of Casalmaggiore (Cremona, November 25 to January 28). The exhibition is called Splendid Persia, visions in Jewel, and curated by Bianca Cappello and the Iranian designer Sogand Nobahar. The exhibition proposes, of course, a selection of historical jewels, but also pieces of contemporary jewelery.
Among the ancient jewels are pieces that originate in ancient Mesopotamia, while among the contemporary jewels are those of great Iranian designers who reinterpret ideas and symbols of the Persian and Islamic traditions. Beside them, with a bold parallel, there is a selection of jewels made in Italy from the sixties to the 2000s thousand years, even those inspired by iconography, Persian colors and poetry. Surprisingly now you know that they exist. Moreover, with an even more surprising mix, the conceptual jewels of a group of young students from the Brera Design Academy’s Fine Art course are displayed.
Finally, the outline of the exhibition is exposed by the unpublished photographs of photographer Federico Wilhelm in Iran. Lavinia Andorno
Great Persia, Visions in Jewel
Bijoux Museum of Casalmaggiore
Via Porzio 9, Casalmaggiore (Cremona)
Timetable: Tuesday to Saturday: 10.00-12.00 / 15.00 – 18.00
Sundays and holidays: 15.00-19.00. Closed Christmas and New Year.
Admission: 3 Euros total; reduced 2.50 euros
Information and reservations: 0375 284424



 Ailin Abrishami
Pendente di Ailin Abrishami
Diadema di Bozart, anni Ottanta
Diadema di Bozart, anni Ottanta
Diadema di Bozart, anni Ottanta
Collana di Carlo Zini, inizio anni Duemila
Collane in corniola incisa, Bactriana III-X secolo d.C.
Collane in corniola incisa, Bactriana III-X secolo d.C.
Collane in faiance, Persia, epoca sasanide VII secolo
Collane in faiance, Persia, epoca sasanide VII secolo
Fateme Safar Talab, collane serie Lady Pomegranate
Fateme Safar Talab, collane serie Lady Pomegranate
Parure di Gianni De Liguoro
Parure di Gianni De Liguoro

Collana in giaietto e argento, secondo XII e XX
Collana in giaietto e argento, secondo XII e XX





Mahnaz Seyedekthiary
Mahnaz Seyedekthiary

Maryam Azadegan, collana e bracciale in ricamo balouch
Maryam Azadegan, collana e bracciale in ricamo balouch
Spilla di Mostafa Daneshi
Spilla di Mostafa Daneshi
Collana di Nahar Najafi
Collana di Nahar Najafi
Nogol Zahabi, collare Dark Blue in ricamo Termeh
Nogol Zahabi, collare Dark Blue in ricamo Termeh
Collana di Ornella Bijoux
Collana di Ornella Bijoux
Ottavio Re, anni Settanta
Ottavio Re, anni Settanta
Sanaz Armaghan. Photo: Mohammad Razaee
Sanaz Armaghan. Photo: Mohammad Razaee
Bracciali di Sharra Pagano
Bracciali di Sharra Pagano
Anello di Shiva Ghorbani
Anello di Shiva Ghorbani

Sogand Nobahar, anello e bracciali serie MyCity, Teheran
Sogand Nobahar, anello e bracciali serie MyCity, Teheran







The jewelery by Gianfranco Ferré




In Turin an exhibition dedicated to 200 jewels designed by Gianfranco Ferré ♦ ︎
Gianfranco Ferré was not only a great designer, but also a great inventor of accessories. Widely used in parades as a complement to dresses, Ferré’s bijoux, which disappeared ten years ago at 63, have the same style as the designer, who was accurate to use them. And to the bijoux Ferré devoted much of his creativity. Now the Ferré Foundation, together with the Fondazione Torino Musei, has organized an exhibition devoted specifically to the jewels of Gianfranco Ferré. It will be set up in Turin, at Palazzo Madama. The title of the exhibition is Gianfranco Ferrè under another light: Jewelry and Ornaments and collects 200 jewels that have accompanied the career of the designer who for another period of his life was also Dior’s artistic director . “For Ferré the ornament is not the youngest child of a precious: shiny stones, enamelled metals, honed shells, painted woods, Murano glasses, retro ceramics, Swarovski crystals, and still wood and leather and iron and copper and bronze have an enchanted horizon of brooches, necklaces, belts, rings, jewelry, bracelets, “explained the curator of the exhibition, Francesca Alfano Miglietti. The exhibition is organized with the Torino Musei Foundation. Rudy Serra
Gianfranco Ferré under another light: Jewelry and Ornaments
October 12, 2017 – February 19, 2018
Turin, Palazzo Madama
Piazza Castello, Turin
Open every day
from 10am to 6pm
except on Tuesday




Gianfranco Ferré, spilla
Gianfranco Ferré, spilla

Gianfranco Ferré, bracciale
Gianfranco Ferré, bracciale
Gianfranco Ferré, bracciale in ottone
Gianfranco Ferré, bracciale in ottone
Gianfranco Ferré, collana in ottone
Gianfranco Ferré, collana in ottone
Gianfranco Ferré, spilla con leone
Gianfranco Ferré, spilla con leone
Spilla a forma di anthurium
Spilla a forma di anthurium
Spilla a forma di insetto
Spilla a forma di insetto

Gianfranco Ferré
Gianfranco Ferré







The collection Al Thani in Paris

The great collection of Indian jewelry by Al Thani arrives in Paris, at Grand Palais.
The jewels of Sheikh Hamad bin Abdullah Al Thani, cousin of the Emir of Qatar, are arriving in Paris. After the exhibition in London, now even the people who go to the French capital can admire the pieces of the collection, centered particularly on the jewels of Indian origin, those of the mughal and maharajas.
A passion that was born in 2009, after Al Thani visited the Victoria & Albert Museum, where it was an ongoing an exhibition of jewels in past owned by Indian princes. And to think that in India Al Thani had never been there. But a powerfull bank account can solves everything: in five years the sheik has collected 400 pieces (in this exhibition there are 270): from imperial jewels to daggers, rings or decoration for turbans.
Now her jewelry will be on display at the Grand Palais, in an exhibition entitled Des grands moghols aux maharajahs (From the great Mughal to Maharaja: Indian jewels of the collection Al Thani). If you like the opulence, wealth, decorations, it is the show for you.

India is the birthplace of the great jewels, as well as the large precious stones. A story that perhaps begins in 1526, when Babur, a descendant of Genghis Khan, conquered Delhi and was proclaimed the first Mughal emperor: an Islamic dynasty that ruled over India for more than three centuries. The pure diamonds of Golconda, one of the Hyderabad region, have encouraged a passion for the great jewels. Because for the maharaja, each gem brought with it a part of divine energy, karma, which strengthens the wearer. In particular, were nine auspicious stones: ruby, topaz, cat’s eye, emerald, diamond, coral, pearls, yellow and blue sapphires.
And with the domination Mughal born the kundan technique, a type of seam that uses pure 24 carat gold. It went like this: you had to heat the gold to 200 degrees centigrade. thin metal strips were wrapped around a stone previously placed on wax cavity. To obtain a good result they wanted instinct and speed. You can see the result at Grand Palais.
Des grands Moghols aux Maharajahs
29 March – June 2017
Paris, Grand Palais, Salon d’Honneur
Open every day from 10 to 20h. Wednesday until 22h.
Closed on Tuesdays and May 1
Ticket: 13 or 9 € (16-25 years old, unemployed, large families).
Free for children under 16
Information and reservations www.grandpalais.frù

Spilla con zaffiro e diamanti
Spilla con zaffiro e diamanti
Bracciale con smalti traslucidi rossi e verde, tipico di Jaipur. Circa 1750
Bracciale con smalti traslucidi rossi e verde, tipico di Jaipur. Circa 1750
Agra, diamante rosa di 28.15 carati, che secondo la leggenda sarebbe stato offerto al Mughal Babur, fondatore dell'impero Moghul, quando ha conquistato la città di Agra, nel 1526
Agra, diamante rosa di 28.15 carati, che secondo la leggenda sarebbe stato offerto al Mughal Babur, fondatore dell’impero Moghul, quando ha conquistato la città di Agra, nel 1526
Spilla in platino con smeraldi e diamanti
Spilla in platino con smeraldi e diamanti
Spilla per cappello con diamanti e rubini
Spilla per cappello con diamanti e rubini
Spilla della francese Mellerio
Spilla della francese Mellerio
Gioiello per Turbante del 19esimo secolo, Jaipur o Hyderabad, in oro, argento e diamanti e spinelli, con ciondolo smaltato
Gioiello per Turbante del 19esimo secolo, Jaipur o Hyderabad, in oro, argento e diamanti e spinelli, con ciondolo smaltato
Maharaja indiano
Maharaja indiano
Spilla con diamanti bianchi e brown
Spilla con diamanti bianchi e brown
Collana di rubini e diamanti
Collana di rubini e diamanti
Collezione Al Thani, spilla per turbante con perle e diamanti
Collezione Al Thani, spilla per turbante con perle e diamanti
Turban (sarpesh). India del Sud, probabilmente Hyderabad. Set in oro con smeraldi e diamanti
Turban (sarpesh). India del Sud, probabilmente Hyderabad. Set in oro con smeraldi e diamanti


Bulgari with Rome in Madrid

An exhibition with 145 jewels explores the influence (close) between the Bulgari design and the monuments of Rome.

The link between architecture and jewelery is tight. In some cases, then, it is almost ostentatious. So it’s not a surprise the exhibition Bulgari and Rome, in Madrid at Museo Thyssen Bornemisza, with 145 pieces of jewelry that show the similarities between some of the Maison masterpieces and other masterpieces such as monuments and urban organization of the Eternal City. Some of the forms as the plant St. Peter’s Square, Spanish Steps, Piazza Navona and Pantheon, for example, may be found in bracelets and necklaces by Bulgari. But even the old pavement in small blocks of stone can become the model of cascades of stones that form an irregular mosaic. Or the Coliseum, which, with its facade of full and empty spaces inspired a 1934 bracelet with diamonds and rubies, in perfect Art Deco style. And not forgetting the obelisks that were brought to Rome by the emperors two thousand years ago and have seen their hieroglyphics turn into snakes and symbols that accompanied the creations of Bulgari for so many years. It is also used the octagonal shape, a favorite in many monuments and Baroque architecture: a pendant with this geometry was one of the nicest jewelry gifted from Richard Burton to Elizabeth Taylor for 40 years, perhaps to relieve the shock of the age. The exhibition hosts the Bulgari Heritage Collection, which includes, of course, jewelry that belonged American actress, plus some drawings on loan from private collections such as the Baroness von Thyssen. Federico Graglia
Bulgari and Rome
From 30 November 2016 to 26 February 2017
Paseo del Prado, 8
28014 Madrid
http://www.museothyssen.org/

Girocollo con diamanti e rubini che riprende la forma del Colosseo
Girocollo con diamanti e rubini che riprende la forma del Colosseo
Il colosseo
Il colosseo
Collier e orecchini come una piazza con colonne
Collier e orecchini come una piazza con colonne
Collana di zaffiri che ricorda la pavimentazione di pietra
Collana di zaffiri che ricorda la pavimentazione di pietra
Collana in oro e diamanti
Collana in oro e diamanti
Bracciale serpente di ispirazione egizia
Bracciale serpente di ispirazione egizia
Bracciale che ricorda la pianta di piazza San Pietro
Bracciale che ricorda la pianta di piazza San Pietro
Bracciale che ricorda i fori imperiali
Bracciale che ricorda i fori imperiali

The italian jewelry at Poldi Pezzoli

The history of Italian jewelry in the twentieth century in an exhibition at the Museo Poldi Pezzoli in Milan.
To tell the story of the Italian jewel in the twentieth century, it would not be enough encyclopedia. But a close look at a number of particularly great pieces can make an adequate summary. And it is the aim of the exhibition Il gioiello italiano del XX secolo, organized at Museo Poldi Pezzoli in Milan. Melissa Gabardi, which has selected and brought together the 150 pieces on display, wants do a photograph the Italian production through chronological sections dedicated to new historicism, the Liberty, Art Deco, the production of the thirties, forties and fifties, until you get to sixties, seventies, eighties and nineties. In short, nothing is missing. For jewelry lovers or history of goldsmith’s art, it is an interesting opportunity. There are tiaras and diadems, necklaces umbilicals, rings, bracelets, brooches and earrings made by masters like Mario and then Gianmaria Buccellati, Alfredo Ravasco (some works are on display to the public for the first time), Filippo Chiappe, of the Turin Musy, Petochi and Cusi, the neoarcheologismo Codognato, to jewelry in coral Ascione family. The exhibition is broad.
The jewels will be shown in relation to their historical, social and economic, with particular reference to the artistic culture (fashion, design, architecture), as well as events and personalities that have characterized the various ages and influenced public opinion, in particularly members of royal families and movie stars, who were inspiring models of collective taste. An evolution that led to what is now recognized as made in Italy.
The Italian jewel of the twentieth century
November 24, 2016 – March 20, 2017
Museo Poldi Pezzoli
Via Manzoni 12-20121 Milan
Salle 10 to 18 (last entry at 17.30)
The Museum is closed on Tuesdays, New Year, Easter, April 25, May 1, August 15, November 1, December 8, Christmas, Boxing Day
Tickets: 10 €, reduced 7 €
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Pendente in corallo di Ascione
Pendente in corallo di Ascione

Due opposti modi di intendere la gioielleria. A sinistra, Nardi, Moretto, Albero della vita. A destra, collana di Bulgari stile Art Deco
Due opposti modi di intendere la gioielleria. A sinistra, Nardi, Moretto, Albero della vita. A destra, collana di Bulgari stile Art Deco
Tiara firmata Mario Buccellati, 1929
Tiara firmata Mario Buccellati, 1929
Diadema di Musy gioielli, di Torino
Diadema di Musy gioielli, di Torino
Bracciali firmati Pomellato
Bracciali firmati Pomellato
Anello di Alfredo Ravasco
Anello di Ravasco
Collana di Rivière
Collana di Rivière

In Milan 500 Fashion Jewels

The exhibition of 500 fashion jewelry at the Palazzo Reale, in Milan.
Fashion and jewelry: like saying champagne and bubbles, or sea and tanning. In a nutshell, are two aspects of the same game. The differences are especially those related to the material used which, of course, also affect the shape of the jewels, but not the creativity expressed. And Milan, the Italian fashion capital, joins the wires in the exhibition dedicated to the Fashion Jewelry (Royal Palace, from 8 to November 20, admission free). The exhibition is sponsored and produced by the City of Milan, the Royal Palace and Homi and is curated by Alba Cappellieri, a professor of Jewellery Design and the Attachment to the Politecnico di Milano. Objective: to highlight the relationship between Jewel and Fashion. The exhibition presents 500 significant jewels divided into three sections: Jewels for Fashion, dedicated to the main Italian craft and manufacturing excellence, Jewelry on Fashion, with independent designers and brands, with a focus on the creative processes, and Jewelry with Fashion , dedicated to the main designers and ability of jewel to interact with the dress.
And so, the organizers point out that no mention of jewelry but the real jewels for fashion, since they are not the materials to make a valuable object, but the creativity that is used to think it. At the same time, however, it is difficult to argue that a pair of earrings with emeralds and diamonds are not valuable because it modeled on a style already in use.
The fashionable jewelry
8-20 November 2016
Palazzo Reale, Milan, Piazza Duomo 12
Monday from 14.30 to 19.30 Tuesday – Wednesday – Friday – Sunday from 9.30 to 19.30 Thursday – Saturday from 9.30 to 22.30
Last admission one hour before closing
Free entry

Afra Bijoux, 1986. Collana Ottone dorato, cristalli Swarovski
Afra Bijoux, 1986. Collana Ottone dorato, cristalli Swarovski

Blumarine 2014, collana ottone, smalto
Blumarine 2014, collana ottone, smalto
Bozart 1966, collana, ottone, resina plastica, pelle, metallo
Bozart 1966, collana, ottone, resina plastica, pelle, metallo
Carmen Scar, Place Vendôme  Smeraldo 2013, collana tela di lino, colori a olio, resina
Carmen Scar, Place Vendôme Smeraldo 2013, collana tela di lino, colori a olio, resina
Ermanno Scervino, 2014. Bustino tulle, ottone, cristalli
Ermanno Scervino, 2014. Bustino tulle, ottone, cristalli
Fausto Puglisi, Conchiglia 2015, orecchini lega metallica, ottone, conchiglia
Fausto Puglisi, Conchiglia 2015, orecchini lega metallica, ottone, conchiglia
Iosselliani,Collezione Indian Summer, 2014-2013. Collana ottone, agata verde, strass, conchiglie, pietre fuse, galvanica a tre colori
Iosselliani,Collezione Indian Summer, 2014-2013. Collana ottone, agata verde, strass, conchiglie, pietre fuse, galvanica a tre colori
Marni Microrganismi, 2013, collana in legno, metallo, cuoio, resina
Marni Microrganismi, 2013, collana in legno, metallo, cuoio, resina
May mOma GeaSphere 2016. Collana ottone dorato, resina, cristalli Swarovski
May mOma GeaSphere 2016. Collana ottone dorato, resina, cristalli Swarovski
Missoni 2006. Spilla puntale plastica, metallo, cristalli Swarovski, giada
Missoni 2006. Spilla puntale plastica, metallo, cristalli Swarovski, giada
Olivia Monti Arduini. Collezione Opium 2014. Bracciale ottone dorato, porcellana
Olivia Monti Arduini. Collezione Opium 2014. Bracciale ottone dorato, porcellana
Paola Volpi, collezione Armatura 2011. Anelli doppia falange e placca dorso della mano argento
Paola Volpi, collezione Armatura 2011. Anelli doppia falange e placca dorso della mano argento
Prada, Tricks. Collezione 2016. Collana metallo, saffiano, plexiglass
Prada, Tricks. Collezione 2016. Collana metallo, saffiano, plexiglass
Radà, Special edition, collezione 2015. Collana seta, strass, plexiglass, legno, ottone, perline, cuciture a mano
Radà, Special edition, collezione 2015. Collana seta, strass, plexiglass, legno, ottone, perline, cuciture a mano
Sharra Pagano, Marcopaillettes 2014. Collana Paillettes
Sharra Pagano, Marcopaillettes 2014. Collana Paillettes
Sveva Collection. Collezione Scorfanea 2016. Collana metallo, ricami, pietre semipreziose
Sveva Collection. Collezione Scorfanea 2016. Collana metallo, ricami, pietre semipreziose
Ugo Correani. Pinza a pappagallo, collezione Strumenti da lavoro 1980. Spilla resina, strass.  Archivio Associazione Culturale Anna Piaggi
Ugo Correani. Pinza a pappagallo, collezione Strumenti da lavoro 1980. Spilla resina, strass. Archivio Associazione Culturale Anna Piaggi

Paris to Paula Crevoshay

An exhibition in Paris devoted to refined designer and expert of gems Paula Crevoshay .
Paula Crevoshay is two women in one: she is a great expert in minerals, particularly of gems, and at the same time she is a refined designer. Her imaginative jewelry, elaborate, unique, are now the subject of an exhibition organized in Paris at the Musée de Minéralogie. The exhibition is titled Illuminations: de la Terre au Bijou. The occasion is interesting not only to admire closely the extraordinary jewelry that are made by Paula Crevoshay, but also to compare the final result with the initial one, that is, with rough stones from which originates the work of the artist-designer. The jewelry which designs and manufactures Paula Crevoshay, in fact, always start with what the fruit of the earth, the precious gems that turn itself as glittering jewelry items.
The Paris museum houses one of the largest collections of minerals in the world: what better place to pay tribute to a virtuoso of precious stones? Among the most interesting jewels exposure includes the brooch one-of-a-kind Bitterroot, the latest creation, and a bracelet with six opals in their natural form, not cut. Federico Graglia
Illuminations: de la Terre au Bijou
from November 9, 2016 – 1 February 2017
Museum of Mineralogy
60 Boulevard Saint Michel
75006 Paris
Tuesday – Friday: 13h30 – 18h
Sunday: 10:00 to 12:30 and 14h – 17h

Spilla a forma di farfalla
Spilla a forma di farfalla

Orecchini con opali verdi
Orecchini con opali verdi
Pesce volante con apatite, diamanti neri, bianchi e quattro perle
Pesce volante con apatite, diamanti neri, bianchi e quattro perle
Polipo in oro, diamanti e spinelli: è uno dei pezzi esposti alla mostra
Polipo in oro, diamanti e spinelli: è uno dei pezzi esposti alla mostra
Spilla con zaffiri rosa, arancio e gialli
Spilla con zaffiri rosa, arancio e gialli
Spilla con diamanti neri e rubini
Spilla con diamanti neri e rubini
Spilla a forma di fiore con zaffiri orange e gialli
Spilla a forma di fiore con zaffiri orange e gialli
Spilla a forma di fiore con gemme colorate
Spilla a forma di fiore con gemme colorate
Gioiello a forma di medusa
Gioiello a forma di medusa

Poker of Maison in Paris

At the Grand Palais in Paris four major jewelers participating in the Biennale des Antiquaires.
At the Grand Palais in Paris back the Biennale des Antiquaires. Paintings, sculptures, decorative objects, furniture and, of course, jewelry of the highest class. This year there are only four Maison invited, but among the stands of the 112 antique dealers present there are also many historical jewels (mention Bernard Bouisset, Epoque Fine Jewels, Martin Du Daffoy, Véronique Bamps). The contemporary jewelers are, however, four heavyweights: Boghossian Jewels, Cindy Chao, De Grisogono and Nirav Modi (as we anticipated here). And so under the great dome you can also be able to admire exceptional jewels, like those you see on this page. If you are in Paris September from saturday to sunday, in short, you have the opportunity to shine your eyes.
Biennale des Antiquaires
10-18 september
Paris, Grand Palais
Avenue Winston Churchill – 75008
Métro: Champs Elysées-Clemenceau / lignes 1 & 13
Admission: 35 €
Hours: from 11 to 20 (Thursday until 23)

Nirav Modi, anello en tremblant con diamanti rosa e gialli
Nirav Modi, anello en tremblant con diamanti rosa e gialli

Boghossian, anello con zaffiro di Cylon incastonato in calcedonio intarsiato
Boghossian, anello con zaffiro di Cylon incastonato in calcedonio intarsiato
Boghossian, anello con rubino birmano
Boghossian, anello con rubino birmano
Boghossian, orecchini con diamanti fancy
Boghossian, orecchini con diamanti fancy
Boghossian, anello con diamante e smeraldo colombiano
Boghossian, anello con diamante e smeraldo colombiano
Chindy Chao, disegno di collier
Chindy Chao, disegno di collier
De Grisogono, anello della collezione Folies, con dimante e 47 rubini
De Grisogono, anello della collezione Folies, con dimante e 47 rubini
De Grisogono, anello con diamanti e smeraldi
De Grisogono, anello con diamanti e smeraldi
De Grisogono, anello con diamante cushion e smeraldi
De Grisogono, anello con diamante cushion e smeraldi
Nirav Modi, orecchini in diamanti
Nirav Modi, orecchini in diamanti

The Masterpiece London jewelry

Antiques, but also many extraordinary jewels: Masterpiece London is the leading international exhibition for art and design, which attracts collectors from all over the world. Among the 154 stands of selected exhibitors you will find everything from ancient statue to contemporary jewelry. All this, however, a high level, very high. All works are for sale and certified by international experts to ensure the origin and quality. Are, for example, jewelery signed by Suzanne Belperron, Castellani and even Salavator Dali, or famous Maison as Cartier and Van Cleef & Arpels, Chase, Verdura, Hemmerle, Boghossian, Somlo, SJ Phillips, Véronique Bamps, Chatila and Grima. Do not think, though, to find the same jewelry that you can buy in jewelry. They are a breed apart. And there will also Wallace Chan, who will debut in the UK just for Masterpiece London: the Hong Kong designer will present the 2016 Silk Necklace created especially for the exhibition, consisting of 54 diamonds, 124 pink tourmalines, colored diamonds, sapphires pink and white agate. Federico Graglia
Masterpiece London
30 June-6 July 2016
Royal Hospital Chelsea, South Grounds
www.masterpiecefair.com
Hours: 11: 00-21: 00

Audouard (circa 1850). Spilla mazzolino di fiori in oro smaltato insieme con vecchi diamanti taglio brillante e granati nei boccioli di rosa
Audouard (circa 1850). Spilla mazzolino di fiori in oro smaltato insieme con vecchi diamanti taglio brillante e granati nei boccioli di rosa

Da Boghart, orecchini con oro e diamanti
Da Boghart, orecchini con oro e diamanti
Bracciale di Boghossian, diamanti e perle
Bracciale di Boghossian, diamanti e perle
Bracciale Giacinto di Fulco di Verdura, oro, platino, zaffiri, diamanti
Bracciale Giacinto di Fulco di Verdura, oro, platino, zaffiri, diamanti
Ciondoli a forma di pesce di Fabergé
Ciondoli a forma di pesce di Fabergé, oro e legno
Spilla-pendente di Boucheron con citrini
Spilla-pendente di Boucheron con citrini
Bracciale in oro giallo con due tigri, diamanti fancy, onice, smeraldi (gli occhi)
Bracciale in oro giallo con due tigri, diamanti fancy, onice, smeraldi (gli occhi)
Collana di René Bonvin, oro giallo, disegnato come una catena, cavo flessibile  che sospende una frangia di nappe con diamanti taglio brillante. Consegnata nel 1945 per la principessa Irene di Grecia
Collana di René Bonvin, oro giallo, disegnato come una catena, cavo flessibile che sospende una frangia di nappe con diamanti taglio brillante. Consegnata nel 1945 per la principessa Irene di Grecia
Collana di diamanti e acquamarine di Van Cleef & Arpels
Collana di diamanti e acquamarine di Van Cleef & Arpels
Orecchini Persistenza del Suono, di Salvator Dalì
Orecchini Persistenza del Suono, di Salvator Dalì
Anello Swinging Peral di Grima
Anello Swinging Peral di Grima
Suzanne Belperron, bracciale con citrini
Suzanne Belperron, bracciale con citrini
Spilla di Tiffany & C.
Spilla di Tiffany & C.
Castellani, circa 1880. Collana in stile revival archeologico in oro giallo, rubini cabochon taglio e perle naturali.  Una collana simile dalla tenuta del nipote di Augusto Castellani appartiene alle collezioni dei Musei Capitolini di Roma
Castellani, circa 1880. Collana in stile revival archeologico in oro giallo, rubini cabochon taglio e perle naturali. Una collana simile dalla tenuta del nipote di Augusto Castellani appartiene alle collezioni dei Musei Capitolini di Roma

Venice wears the vanguard

There are going up exhibitions dedicated to the jewel: the next one is scheduled in Venice. From the Museum of Vicenza, passing through the festivals during the Milan Design Week, to large exhibitions to Asti and Turin: it seems that the jewel has become a work of coolest Italian art. The new exhibition is planned within the event on Design.Ve design. Curated by Ilaria Ruggiero, the exhibition is organized with the support of the School of Jewellery Alchemy and sponsored by the Association of Contemporary Jewellery.
Design.Ve is a popular festival in the most beautiful lagoon city in the world. And, among the things to see in this event is Adornment – Contemporary Jewelry Exhibition, section dedicated to contemporary jewelery. The theme of the exhibition this year is The shape of wearable art, “a jewellery that explores and crosses the typical formal boundaries of the body to defy the mere fit and be above the limit.” In fact, the spirit of the program is traveling on the vanguard: those pieces that were selected for form, design and use of the material, challenge the conventional fitting space to pass him and enter into dialogue with the body in an unexpected manner, able to unveil new senses and meanings tied to the identity of the individual, as it be single or inserted in the community.
On display will be exhibited 14 artists and designers on the international jewel: Rosalba Balsamo, Florence Croisier, Clara Pope, Marion Delarue, Eleonora Ghilardi, Elie Hirsch, Florence Jaquet, Laberintho, Chiara Lucato, Letizia May, Paola Mirai, Ōki Izumi, Nazan Pak and Caterina Zanca. Federico Graglia
Adornment – Contemporary Jewelry Exhibition
The shape of wearable art
Venice in a Bottle
Castello 1794
30122 Venice
25 May-26 June 2016
Monday to Sunday 10:00 to 20:00
Opening Thursday, May 26, 2016 at 19.00

Florence Jaquet, Literary Jewel
Florence Jaquet, Literary Jewel
Composizione concettuale di Caterina Zanca
Composizione concettuale di Caterina Zanca
Marion Delarue, spilla Pappagallo devoto
Marion Delarue, spilla Pappagallo devoto
Lavinia Rossetti, Madeleine
Lavinia Rossetti, Madeleine
Maria Walker, collana Trascendieron
Maria Walker, collana Trascendieron
Chiara Lucato,Il cantastorie, collana con pendente, argento ossidato, acciaio
Chiara Lucato,Il cantastorie, collana con pendente, argento ossidato, acciaio

From Hollywood to Asti 500 bijoux

Over 500 specimens of Fantasy Jewelry on display. But perhaps the most surprising aspect is that this jewelry army comes from a single owner, Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, which besides being an expert and lovers of arts, is also collectionist of necklaces, brooches and bracelets. The exhibition organized at Palazzo Mazzetti Asti, which also preserves collections of carvings, ancient textiles and ceramics, and it’s titled Jewels Fantasy. American dreams. It is an opportunity to look at the evolution of Costume Jewelry, from classical to pop jewelry creations of the fifties and sixties, created by designers such as Trifari, Marcel Boucher, Coro, De Rosa, Eisenberg, Miriam Haskell, Eugene Joseff, Kenneth J. Lane, Pennino, until Wendy Gell and Iradj Moini. The costume jewelry is a socio-cultural phenomenon born in the United States after the great crisis of 1929-1939: since the scarce money, luxury products have been replaced by jewelry with non-precious materials. A choice that stimulates the imagination and led to new techniques. The Hollywood fiction also had a hand in the creation of large jewels with metals less noble than those of high-end jewelry. For example, those worn on the costumes from movie stars like Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich, Bette Davis and Vivien Leigh. Joseff, designers who invented jewelry for hundreds of successful films (such as Gone with the Wind), has also signed jewelry worn by the first lady, as Mamie Eisenhower and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.
According to Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo these fancy jewels “represent a cultural heritage that brings us back to difficult times and great social changes.” In short, she says, they are “poor but beautiful”, accessible and affordable for all.
Fantasy jewelry. American dreams
16 April to 2 October 2016
Palazzo Mazzetti, Corso Vittorio Alfieri 357, Asti
Hours: Tuesday to Sunday from 9:30 to 19:30 (last admission 18:30), closed on Mondays with the exception of 25 April and 15 August.
ticket € 5.00, reduced € 3.00
www.palazzomazzetti.it

Ballerina, spilla
Ballerina, spilla
Bijoux a forma di rana
Bijoux a forma di rana in mostra ad Asti
Spilla in mostra «Gioielli Fantasia. Sogni americani»
Spilla in mostra «Gioielli Fantasia. Sogni americani»
Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo con collana fantasia
Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo con collana fantasia
Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo
Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo
Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo
Patrizia Sandretto Re Rebaudengo con una delle collane della sua collezione

Salone del Mobile and jewels

If you are in Milan for the Salone del Mobile, you can take the opportunity to visit the project «Redefine the Jewel». The event is dedicated to travel and different cultures. The exhibition is curated by Patrizia Sonia Chain, and is organized from 17 March to Rossini gallery will be open to the Fuorisalone. The exhibition includes the seven winners of the Special Award Rossini, jewels that have redefined the concept of precious jewel through different materials. On display are the creations of Nelly Bonati (nel_nel), Valentina Cecconi (Filiforme), Mariolina Mascarino (Almost Candies), Emanuela Mezzadri, Alessandra Pasini (Pasa Jewels), Gabriella Poglianich, Elizabeth Portinari and Daniela Paolucci – stone jewels of Vicenza.
Opening: March 17, 2016 from 18.00
Rossini gallery
Viale Monte Nero 58, Milan
The exhibition will run until April 17
Hours: Mar. Sat from 10.00 to 19.00
Information:
www.ridefinireilgioiello.com

Masterpieces at Tefaf

If you love high-class jewelry, maybe the old jewels, it’s a golden opportunity that comes back: the Tefaf Maastricht, important event dedicated to antiques. In Tefaf you will find everything of the highest quality: furniture, paintings, ceramics, and also exceptional jewelry, as those who publish here as preview. The Tefaf 2016 will be held from 11 to 20 March at the Mecc (Maastricht Exhibition and Congress Centre) of the Dutch city. You have time, then, to prepare for a visit. It’s worth it: in addition to the jewelry you see on this page (is a selection of those who will be exposed), the Dutch exhibition is also an opportunity for numerous cultural events. An area of ​​the fair, for example, will be curated by Mark Kremer: space is entitled «Zeige Deine Wunde / Show your wound», reference to a sculptural work made by Joseph Beuys in an underground passage in Monaco in 1974. The installation will show the work of artists who continue to explore and express the ideas of death, decay, expropriation and the sense of trauma (injury), as suggested in the original work Beuys. In addition, there is the exhibition of a collection of prints and drawings from the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, with works by Bellini, Grünewald, Dürer, Fra Bartolomeo, Tintoretto, Rubens and Rembrandt to be complemented by modern and contemporary works by artists such as Degas, Cezanne, Dali, Magritte, Fontana and Kusama.
Tefaf
Mecc (Maastricht Exhibition & Congress Centre)
Hours: 11am to 7.00pm (on 20 March the Fair closes at 06.00pm)
Entrance € 40 € 25 € 60 Catalogue Entrance (1 person including 1 catalog) Passepartout € 125 (including 1 catalog) € 20 Children under 12 accompanied by 12-18 yearsChildren an adult free 

Art Nouveau, pendente Poppies
Art Nouveau, pendente Poppies
Spilla con diamanti taglio old mine. Circa 1870
Spilla con diamanti taglio old mine. Circa 1870
Castellani, collana in archaelogical revival style
Castellani, collana in archaelogical revival style
Spilla firmata Chopard
Spilla firmata Chopard
collana di Joe Tilson (Londra, 1928)
collana di Joe Tilson (Londra, 1928)
Collier Toggle Torque con diamanti, di Suzanne Belperron
Collier Toggle Torque con diamanti, di Suzanne Belperron
Hemmerle, anello con zaffiro, tanzanite, argento brunito, oro bianco
Hemmerle, anello con zaffiro, tanzanite, argento brunito, oro bianco
Wallace Chan, anello My Dream. Tormalina acquamarina, lapislazzuli, tsavorite, diamante, granato, zaffiro rosa
Wallace Chan, anello My Dream. Tormalina
acquamarina, lapislazzuli, tsavorite, diamante, granato, zaffiro rosa
Orecchini in oro con zaffiri cabochon
Orecchini in oro con zaffiri cabochon
Collana di Van Cleef & Arpels in oro con zaffiri e diamanti
Collana di Van Cleef & Arpels in oro con zaffiri e diamanti
Van Cleef & Arpels, spilla ballerina. Diamanti, rubini e zaffiri rosa
Van Cleef & Arpels, spilla ballerina. Diamanti, rubini e zaffiri rosa
Wallace Chan, Let Life Beautiful. Spilla con zaffiro, diamante colorato, rubino, smeraldo
Wallace Chan, Let Life Beautiful. Spilla con zaffiro, diamante colorato, rubino, smeraldo

A jewelry show in New York

If you like jewelry and want to take a look at 30 thousand pieces offered by 80 exhibitors, these days go by in the annual New York Art, Antique & Jewelry Show at the Park Avenue Armory (20 to 24 November). You can put eyes on jewelry, watches and antiques, worth millions of dollars. Experts advise to take a look at a ring with 18.5 carat Kashmir sapphire worth $ 6.5 million and a diamond cross belonged, apparently, to Pope Paul VI. The exhibition also features an unusual bracelet Cartier yellow diamond fancy yellow and white, onyx and emerald-shaped double tiger (the stand of Véronique Bamps), and a ring-style Art Deco platinum, sapphire and diamond, signed Suzanne Belperron, 1940 approximately. But there are not only antique jewelry. Also in the catalog are a limited edition of pieces by Suzanne Syz. Federico Graglia
New York Art, Antique & Jewelry Show
Park Avenue Armory
643 Park Ave
(between 66th and 67th Streets)
New York, NY 10065
Timetables
Saturday, November 21, 11: 00-08: 00
Sunday, November 22, 11: 00-06: 00
Monday, November 23, 11: 00-08: 00
Tuesday, November 24, 11: 00-05: 00
Tickets: $ 20

Suzanne Syz, anello-Wanna Play the Maze
Suzanne Syz, anello-Wanna Play the Maze
Anello con zaffiro cabochon di Suzanne Belperron
Anello con zaffiro cabochon di Suzanne Belperron
Bracciale con doppia tigre di Cartier
Bracciale con doppia tigre di Cartier
Suzanne Syz, orecchini Hit the bullseye. Smalto, oro bianco, argento rosa, 388 diamanti
Suzanne Syz, orecchini Hit the bullseye. Smalto, oro bianco, argento rosa, 388 diamanti