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A Gold, Gemset and Nephrite Letter Opener by Carl Faberge, Chief Workmaster: Michael Perchin, St. Petersburg 1899-1903

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Faberge Nephrite Bat Letter Opener 2

Faberge Nephrite Bat Letter Opener

A Gold, Gemset and Nephrite Letter Opener by Carl Faberge, Chief Workmaster: Michael Perchin, St. Petersburg 1899-1903. Photo courtesy Wartsky

the blade carved from a single piece of Siberian Jade, the handle in the form of intertwining bat wings. The three terminals on the handle are set with cabochon moonstones, whilst the centre is set with two cabochon rubies on both sides. Inventory number: 1979.18cm in length. Price on application

Provenance: Bought by Dowager Tsarina Marie Feodorovna on 17th December 1899.

Wartskyhttp://www.wartski.com/


An enamelled and gem-set coloured gold mounted double nephrite bell push by Carl Fabergé, Moscow, 1896-1908

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An enamelled and gem-set coloured gold mounted double nephrite bell push by Carl Fabergé, Moscow, 1896-1908. Photo courtesy Wartsky

of rectangular form, the top decorated with oyster coloured enamel plaques beneath gold cagework set with rose diamonds, centring an elliptical pattern of coloured gold swags, with two raised mountsholding the cabochon garnet and moonstone pushes, the sides banded with ribbon tied gold reeding, supported on four gadrooned gold feet. 11.2 by 7.7 by 2.3 cms. Price on application

Wartskyhttp://www.wartski.com/

A jewelled coloured gold mounted nephrite handle by Carl Fabergé, St. Petersburg, inventory number: 3146

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Faberge handle nephrite tau

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A jewelled coloured gold mounted nephrite handle  by Carl Fabergé, St. Petersburg, inventory number: 3146. Photo courtesy Wartsky

the tau shaped handle cut from a single piece of nephrite, its gold mount enamelled with seven translucent red arches divided by columns of rose diamonds between reeded bands of green gold applied with red gold laurel leaves, the shaft of the handle mounted with finely chased yellow gold swags and festoons tied with red gold bands and suspended from two rose diamonds; 6.3 cm across, 5.5 cm height. Price on application

Wartskyhttp://www.wartski.com/

National Museum of Scotland explores the myths that surround Mary, Queen of Scots

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Detail of Blairs memorial portrait. Photo: Blairs Museum Trust

EDINBURGH.- This summer National Museums Scotland presents a major exhibition on the life of Mary Stewart (1542-87), Queen of Scots. The exhibition, showing only in Edinburgh, explores the myth and reality that surround one of the most enigmatic and romanticised figures in Scottish history through a unique gathering of paintings, jewellery, textiles, furniture, drawings, maps and documents. 

Significant loans from major public collections in Scotland, England and France and from private collections build on the Scottish history collections of National Museums Scotland to create a rich and detailed picture of Mary, Queen of Scots. 

Visitors are able to view documentary evidence, from the earliest surviving letter written by Mary to the warrant for her execution signed by Elizabeth I, which is on display in Scotland for the first time since it was acquired by Lambeth Palace in 2007. Other key documents include examples of the “Casket letters”, which were used to incriminate her in the Darnley murder, and a letter with secret cipher, which were presented as proof of her association with the Babington plot to assassinate Elizabeth I and thus led eventually to her execution in 1587. 

Some of the finest pieces of jewellery associated with Mary are also on show. She owned a spectacular collection of jewellery and a gold necklace and pendant locket, known collectively as the Penicuik jewels, are on display. These were said to have been given to one of her supporters during her captivity, jewels being useful gifts to bind supporters to the Crown. 

Mary, Queen of Scots at the National Museum of Scotland traces Mary’s story through the dynastic alliances at the heart of Renaissance Europe, following her life from birth in Scotland, childhood in France, to ruling both France and Scotland as Queen, her imprisonment in England and eventual execution. Mary’s legacy is also considered: through her son, King James VI and I, she is the direct ancestor of the present royal family. 

George Dalgleish, Keeper of Scottish History & Archaeology at National Museums Scotland, said, 

Following our acclaimed exhibition exploring the life and collections of Catherine the Great, we are proud to present Mary, Queen of Scots, an extraordinary exhibition which investigates a celebrated figure through compelling and remarkable objects. More remarkable still is the fact the Museum sits on the location of one of the most controversial events in Mary’s story- the murder of Darnley.” 

Portraits, sketches, jewels, letters and personal effects introduce the key characters in Mary’s story, her family (the Stewarts of Scotland and the Guise and Valois families of France), her friends, her supporters and her husbands, as well as her detractors, rivals and enemies. 

The exhibition examines Mary’s key position in Renaissance Europe, alongside some of her female contemporaries: Mary of Guise, Mary Tudor, Elizabeth I of England, and Catherine de Medici. Mary was sent to live in France at 5 years old, to join one of Europe’s most powerful and flamboyant courts. There she became, briefly, queen of France before her young husband, the Dauphin François, died. 

She returned to Scotland a striking young widow in 1561; tall, with auburn hair and a fine pale complexion, illustrated by a fine portrait by Francois Clouet from the Royal Collection Trust. The exhibition explores the character and lifestyle of the young Queen, in a challenging political and religious context. Mary’s youth and joie de vivre enriched the existing Renaissance character of the Scottish court of her mother, father and grandfather. Raised in a sophisticated and glittering environment, Mary loved fine clothing and amassed a spectacular wardrobe of elegant and fashionable dresses. While very little original costume survives from the period, there will be sketches from Jasper Conran OBE for the costumes used in the 1998 English National Opera production of Donizetti’s Maria Stuarda. 

She played the lute, was an exceptional needlewoman, enjoyed card games long into the night, and loved hunting and hawking as well as masques, dancing and playing music. A range of objects represent these pursuits, including a gaming board with silver tablemen and gold dice said to have been presented by Mary to her friend and confidante, Mary Seton, one of the so-called ‘four Maries’, her closest female attendants. During this period, the reckless Mary is known to have taken to the streets of Edinburgh disguised as a young man and accompanied by the four Maries. 

Renaissance maps and scientific instruments such as a 15th century French astrolabe and 16th century table clock show the context of Europe moving towards an era of rapid scientific advancement, exploration and discovery. And yet, elsewhere, the 1563 Witchcraft Act shows that this was not yet an age of reason. Her allegiance to her Catholic faith and her tolerance of her Protestant subjects drew her into dangerous waters. John Knox, a leading figure in the Protestant Reformation, took every opportunity to verbally denounce her and damn her in print. This is particularly illustrated by Knox’s 1558 “First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women”, in which he attacked the rise of female, Catholic rulers in Europe. 

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Heart pendant with onyx cameo of Mary, Queen of Scots, late 16th century© National Museums Scotland

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The Blairs Memorial Portrait of Mary, Queen of Scots, early 17th century© Blairs Museum Trust

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Detail of Blairs memorial portrait. Photo: Blairs Museum Trust

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Miniature portrait of Mary, Queen of Scots, by Clouet, 1558© Royal Collection Trust

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Book of Hours, by Robert Granjon, 1558© by permission of the British Jesuit Province

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Carved oak medallion head, c1540© National Museums Scotland

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The Darnley Jewel© Royal Collection Trust, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2013

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Death warrant of Mary, Queen of Scots, 1 February 1587© Trustees of Lambeth Palace Library

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Mary, Queen of Scots, by François Clouet, c1559–61© Royal Collection Trust, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2013

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Replica tomb, after Cornelius and William Cure© Scottish National Portrait Gallery

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Silver ryal of Henry and Mary, minted in Edinburgh, 1565© National Museums Scotland

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Silver one-third ryal minted at Edinburgh in 1565, during Mary's ill-fated marriage to Henry, Lord Darnley. © National Museums Scotland

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Gold necklace, part of the Penicuik jewels, preserved by the Clerks of Penicuik as relics of Mary. © National Museums Scotland

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This gold necklace, locket and pendant date from the late 16th century. Known as the 'Penicuik Jewels', they were preserved by the Clerks of Penicuik as relics of Mary. © National Museums Scotland

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Gold locket, part of the Penicuik jewels, preserved by the Clerks of Penicuik as relics of Mary. © National Museums Scotland

Ham House

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Detail of an oval pier-glass in the Queen’s Bedchamber at Ham House, one of a pair by supplied by William Bradshaw, c.1743. It reflects a carved and gilded garland by John Bullamore dating from the 1670s. ©National Trust Images/John Hammond

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Fruitwood armchair, c. 1730, in the Queen’s Bedchamber at Ham House, with velvet upholstery in red, green and cream silk velvet woven in either Genoa, Lyons or Spitalfields. ©National Trust Images/John Hammond

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Detail of the silk velvet upholstery of the fruitwood furniture in the Queen’s Bedchamber at Ham House. ©National Trust Images/John Hammond

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Detail of the marble topped pier table in the Queen’s Bedchamber at Ham House, by William Bradshaw, c.1743, with a Portoro marble top and carved and gilded legs. ©National Trust Images/John Hammond

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Parcel-gilt pier-glass and table possibly by William Bradshaw, c.1740, in the Volury Room at Ham House. ©National Trust Images/John Hammond

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Gilt X-frame sofa, 1735-40, in the style of William Kent and with velvet upholstery, in the Volury Room at Ham House. ©National Trust Images/John Hammond

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Torchere by Peter Hasert, one of a pair, 1741, in the Marble Dining Room at Ham House.©National Trust Images/John Hammond

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Pier-glass, pier-table and stands veneered with incised Chinese lacquer, c. 1675, in the Withdrawing Room at Ham House. The table and stands were supplied with new supports by John Hele in 1741. ©National Trust Images/John Hammond

(source http://nttreasurehunt.wordpress.com/)

Javanese tea tables

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A splendid Javanese lacquer table in "Dutch family taking tea", c. 1680, attributed to Roelof Koets II (c. 1650-1725). ©Sotheby’s

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The Duchess’s Private Closet at Ham House, with the so-called Javanese table raised on a European base. ©National Trust Images/John Hammond

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Close-up of the table at Ham (inv. no. NT1140034). ©National Trust Collections

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Javanese lacquer table in the Balcony Room at Dyrham Park. ©National Trust Images/Andreas von Einsiedel

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Close-up of the table at Dyrham. ©National Trust Collections

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A Javanese parcel-gilt and red lacquer cedarwood tea table, Circa 1680 . Photo Christie's Image Ltd 2013

The tray-shaped top with cusped edges, supported by six cabriole legs decorated on a red ground with low relief gilded oriental carvings; 45.5 cm. high x 77.5 cm. wide x 42.5 cm. Deep . Estimate €15,000 - €25,000 - Price Realized €38,700 

Notes: With the introduction of tea to Europe in the second half of the 16th century, a whole new market evolved around this new and luxurious beverage.
European tea was far too expensive to gain favor with anyone but the rich. The high society and wealthy tea-drinking Europeans started to organize tea gardens and dances and developed other tea ceremonies with various attrib-utes. For example special shaped and sized tea pots, cups and saucers, spoons and also accessories indirectly connected to tea such as trays and tables.
Tables specially produced for the taking of tea made their appearance late in the 17th century. A specimen at Rosenborg Castle in Copenhagen has a tray-like top with splayed sides, all covered in floral marquetry (possibly manufactured by a Dutch cabinetmaker). The tray is a quircky european feature on the present Javanese tea table. In Europe comparable designs can be found in various (former) royal and noble collections. In Great Britain similar Javanese lacquer tea tables are in the collections at Ham House, Dyrham Park and Lyme Park. Schloss Charlottenburg in Germany displays several comparable tea tables. The tea table in Ham House was possibly bought by the Duchess of Lauderale, in Holland (mentioned in the inventory from 1683 onwards, op. cit. P. Thornton, 1978, p. 230 and plate 216). But we are not even sure whether these tables did indeed come from Java. There are some related tables in a few German collections, dating from around the same time and with similar distinctive pie-crust rims, but drum-shaped instead of rectangular. At the present day in Holland there are no comparable tea tables known besides of the present one. Nevertheless a picture attributed to Roelof Koets the Younger (ca. 1630/50 1725) from ca. 1680 shows the use of a similar Javanese parcel-gilt lacquer tea table in a 17th century Dutch interior. All the mentioned tea tables above have a similar separate, two tiers structure: with cabriole legs supporting the tray-like top and turned or column-shaped legs at the base (as can be seen in the 1680s painting by Koets).
 

Art and Fashion in the Age of Shakespeare

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Portrait of Lady Anne Sackville, Lady Beauchamp (1586–1664) or Frances Prynne or Prinne, Lady Seymour of Trowbridge (d.1626), attributed to William Larkin, at Petworth House (inv. no. NT486187). ©National Trust Images/John Hammond

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Portrait of Francis Seymour, 1st Baron Seymour of Trowbridge (c.1590-1664), in the style of William Larkin, at Petworth House (inv. no. NT486188). ©National Trust Images/John Hammond

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Portrait of Mary Curzon, Countess of Dorset (1585 -1645), by William Hamilton RA (1751-1801) after William Larkin, at Kedleston Hall (inv. no. NT108775). ©National Trust Images/Ian Blantern

(source http://nttreasurehunt.wordpress.com/)

Two Chinese porcelain armorial dishes

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One of a set of Chinese porcelain dishes decorated with the Child coat of arms (NT771442), early 18th century with later additions, at Osterley. ©National Trust Collections

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Plate from a Chinese porcelain armorial dinner service decorated with various symbols including the Anson crest and arms, reputedly given to Commodore Anson by the European merchants in Canton. Inv. no. NT1271545.©National Trust Collections

(source http://nttreasurehunt.wordpress.com/)


Girls of the Elizabethan age

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Portrait of Elizabeth I, by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger. ©Trinity College, University of Cambridge, supplied by the Public Catalogue Foundation

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Portrait of Margaret Gerard, Lady Legh, attributed to Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger. Accepted in lieu of inheritance tax by HM Government and allocated to the National Trust for display at Lyme Park, 2011. ©National Trust Collections

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Portrait of Blanche Parry, possibly by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, at Tredegar House, Newport. ©National Trust Collections, supplied by the Public Catalogue Foundation

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Portrait of Elizabeth Vernon, Countess of Southampton, by school of Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger. ©Glasgow Museums, supplied by the Public Catalogue Foundation

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Portrait possibly of Anne Keighley, Mrs William Cavendish, by Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, at Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire. ©National Trust Collections, supplied by the Public Catalogue Foundation

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Portrait of an unknown lady, aged 31, holding a glove and fan, in the style of Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger, at Nostell Priory. ©National Trust Collections, supplied by the Public Catalogue Foundation

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Portrait of an unknown pregnant lady, attributed to Marcus Gheeraerts the Younger. Accepted by HM Government in lieu of inheritance tax and allocated to Tate, 1999. ©Tate, supplied by the Public Catalogue Foundation

Bulgari Diva Collection

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Carla Bruni Sarkozy, guest of honor, adorned with a new piece from Buglari’s Diva Collection. Photo courtesy of Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Boucles d'oreilles en or, saphirs et diamants, collection Diva, BulgariPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bague, sautoir et collier, collection Diva, BulgariPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Collier en or, tourmalines, rubellites, péridots, grenats et brillants, collection Diva, BulgariPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bracelet en or et platine, émeraudes, spinelles, rubis et brillants, collection Diva, BulgariPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bague en platine sertie de deux diamants de 5 carats et d'une émeraude de Colombie de 36,53 carats qui aurait appartenu à la famille Romanov, collection Diva, BulgariPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Manchette en or, améthystes, péridots, grenats et brillants, collection Diva, BulgariPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Bulgari Diva CollectionPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Sautoir en or rose, turquoise, améthystes, rubellites et diamants, collection Diva, BulgariPhoto Antonio Barrella/Studio Orizzonte/Bulgari

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Carla Bruni-SarkozyPhoto David Atlan/Bulgari

« Elle incarne par excellence l’image de la diva contemporaine. C’est pour cela que nous l’avons choisie comme égérie ». Jean-Christophe Babin, PDG de Bulgari.

HÔTEL DE LA LUMIÈRE. La nouvelle collection de Haute Joaillerie de Boucheron

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HÔTEL DE LA LUMIÈRE. Photo courtesy of Boucheron

Nouveau chapitre de « L’Artisan du Rêve » célébrant la lumière, la collection Hôtel de la Lumière s’inscrit dans la tradition de la Haute Joaillerie française. Toutes les pièces s’inspirent également des archives, en les réinterprétant de manière contemporaine pour les rendre encore plus belles que celles d’hier. Ainsi la Maison raconte son histoire : une histoire où la lumière est reine. A travers huit chapitres se révèlent huit univers tous distincts et unis à la fois comme les huit facettes de la Place Vendôme, comme les huit planètes du système solaire, comme les huit rayons de la roue de la vie…

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SOLEIL RADIANT. Photo courtesy of Boucheron

Quoi de plus naturel qu’un soleil comme premier rayon de cette collection ? Le soleil est la source de la lumière, ce qui rend la femme lumineuse, régénère la vie et confère au bijou son éternité. La parure Radiant Soleil qui joue à cache-cache avec la lune est une pièce aérienne, très subtile, souple et délicate qui se pose sur la peau comme un col de lumière ou autour d’une boîte en cristal de roche comme un soleil qui viendrait embrasser la lune.

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PAON DE LUNE. Photo courtesy of Boucheron

Chef d’œuvre de virtuosité, la parure Paon de Lune se prête à la métamorphose par son multiporté et par ses reflets irréguliers et changeants. Peut-être est-ce parce que le paon a si souvent inspiré la Maison. Le défi était donc ici de renouer avec la tradition, tout en lui redonnant sa pleine lumière, sa rareté, ses lettres de noblesse, son rayonnement unique.

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CASCADE DE DIAMANTS. Photo courtesy of Boucheron

Le collier Cascade de Diamants est comme ces pyramides de coupes de champagne où le champagne coule à flot et arrive parfaitement dans chaque verre. C’est un hommage à César Ritz avec lequel Frédéric Boucheron partage tant de points communs. C’est une parure généreuse et affirmée qui renoue avec l’amour de Boucheron pour les noces de cristal et de diamant. C’est un joyau de lumière qui nous rappelle que Paris est une fête !

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PERLES D'ÉCLAT. Photo courtesy of Boucheron

On raconte que Dom Pérignon a voulu supprimer les bulles des vins de champagne au XVIIe siècle avant de s’apercevoir bien vite qu’elles en étaient la quintessence : ce qui en fait la beauté, la singularité et l’arôme. La parure Perles d’éclat incarne ce nectar tout en lumière, effervescence et légèreté.

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HALO DELILAH. Photo courtesy of Boucheron

En hommage à ses ancêtres drapiers, la Maison Boucheron s’est toujours inspirée de la Haute Couture au fil de ses collections. Mettant la technique au service de la création, elle dépasse les limites de son métier pour façonner l’or comme on travaillerait une étoffe, la tissant pour la rendre souple et légère comme un drapé. Dans Halo Delilah, inspirée d’une création de Jean Cocteau pour une femme indépendante et libre, le fil disparait pour mettre en lumière la pierre.

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GOUTTE DE LUMIÈRE. Photo courtesy of Boucheron

A la fois délicate et imposante, à la fois élégante et affirmée, à la fois classique et libre, la parure Goutte de Lumière brille tant par son éclat que par son esprit. Inspirée de Gabrielle Boucheron, cette parure est l’affirmation de l’esprit bohème : un idéal artistique fait de liberté, de jeu, de féminité et d’affirmation.

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LES MESSAGERS CÉLESTES. Photo courtesy of Boucheron

Boucheron est célèbre pour son précieux bestiaire. Parmi eux, les insectes sont chers au cœur de la Maison, comme le savait si bien Françoise Sagan qui les qualifiait de « messagers » et les collectionnait. Ces émissaires aériens, compagnons du jour et du soleil, donnent lieu à d’extraordinaire jeux de lumière et de transparence dans cette nouvelle collection, tant par les matières que par les dégradés de couleurs et de gravures.

MELLERIO dits MELLER fête ses 400 ans avec la Collection Médicis

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MELLERIO dits MELLER. Collection Médicis créée par Edéenne.Bague "Bourgeon". Photo courtesy Mellerio

Pour fêter ses 400 ans d'existence, la Maison Mellerio dits Meller a fait appel à la créatrice d'origine canadienne Edéenne pour une collection de 37 bijoux dédiée à la reine Marie de Médicis dont 4 pièces de haute joaillerie. Je regrette de ne être alléà la présentation Presse...

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MELLERIO dits MELLER. Collection Médicis. Parure "Luxuriant", collier asymétrique de saphirs et diamants créée par Edéenne. Photo courtesy Mellerio

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MELLERIO dits MELLER. Collection Médicis. Broche "Traîne de corsage", torrents de perles et deux émeraudes dodues créée par Edéenne. Photo courtesy Mellerio

Elle est conçue pour être clippée sur un soutien-gorge, entre les seins, d'esprit Néo-Art Nouveau. Prix: 420 000 €.

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MELLERIO dits MELLER. Collection Médicis. Collier "Médicis". Collerette de cou en or blanc, diamants et 35 carats de rubis birman créée par Edéenne. Photo courtesy Mellerio

Prado Museum presents "Saint Jerome writing", recently attributed to José de Ribera

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Saint Jerome writing (after its restoration), José de Ribera. Oil on canvas, 131,5 x 98 cm. XVII Century. Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado

MADRID.- Thanks to the new, expanded degree of Fundación Iberdrola’s commitment to the Museo del Prado, which began in 2010 when it became the Protector Member of the restoration programme, the Museum will be updating the entire lighting system in the galleries of the permanent collection. Coinciding with the signing of this new agreement, the Museum has presented the painting Saint Jerome writing, recently attributed to Ribera, which will be seen for the first time after its restoration, once again undertaken with the support of Fundación Iberdrola. 

José Pedro Pérez Llorca, President of the Royal Board of Trustees of the Museum, Manuel Marín González, President of Fundación Iberdrola, and Miguel Zugaza Miranda, Director of the Museo del Prado, today provided information on the new collaborative agreement that will allow for better presentation and conservation of the Prado’s collections through the complete replacement of the present system of lighting in its galleries with a new one that uses LED technology. The presentation took place in Room 56A, in front of works by Bosch and Bruegel the Elder, among others, a gallery that now has a LED lighting system as a pilot trial. The change to this new lighting system will allow the Museum to be much more efficient on energy saving by using sustainable systems. After the signing of the agreement, the Museum presented Saint Jerome writing, a recently restored work that will be on display from today with an attribution to Ribera for the first time. In addition, two important restoration projects were singled out: that of The Triumph of Saint Ermengildo by Herrera the Younger, and of María Luisa de Parma wearing a panniered Dress by Goya. These two projects emphasise the importance of Fundación Iberdrola’s support for the fundamental work of restoration carried out at the Museum. In addition, the next restoration project, that of El Greco’s The Disrobing of Christ from Toledo cathedral, was announced. 

The addition of Fundación Iberdrola as a “Protector Member” of the Prado’s restoration programme in November 2010 marked a fundamental agreement, which ensured that the Prado could continue to undertake the restoration projects necessary for the appropriate conservation of its collections. These projects, which have involved removing oxidized varnishes and re-establishing the correct harmony of the works’ tonal relations in order to bring back the sense of light in them, have ensured a correct visual reading of the paintings in question. This visual reading will now be even easier due to a lighting system based on LED technology that will gradually be installed in the galleries of the permanent collection over the next four years thanks to this new collaborative agreement signed with Fundación Iberdrola. As a result, the Fundación now has the highest status, that of Benefactor, among the categories of Corporate Friends of the Museum. 

Masterpieces in the Prado in a new light 

The presentation of the permanent collection not only reflects a new discourse in its display, which has created an ordered route based on the combination of a chronological ordering and by schools, but also the implementation of a series of initiatives that have aimed to ensure optimum display conditions and preservation of the works. 

Falling within this initiative is the project to exhibit the masterpieces in the Prado with new lighting, sponsored by Fundación Iberdrola. This will consist of installing a new lighting system in the galleries of the permanent collection using LED technology in order to improve display conditions of the works and enable them to be more easily seen and interpreted. In addition, it will allow the Museum to become more energy efficient through a strategy of energy saving and environmental management. 

This procedure will offer a solution to the differing requirements of the Museum’s rooms and works of art. It will intensify the colours and ensure the correct sensation of volume, generating an effect of depth without distorting the composition, and making the visual experience more distinct and crisp. Finally, it will help to get rid of UV radiation and infra-red, while reducing CO2 levels and lowering maintenance costs. 

The project will be carried out over twelve stages and will continue until May 2017. It will begin in Rooms 49, 50, 52 (the Várez Fisa gallery), 52B, 52C, 55B, 56B and 57B, located on the ground floor of the Villanueva Building. It will end in the rooms that flank the northern part Central Gallery where works by El Greco, Ribera and Velázquez are on display. Priority will be given to rooms in which the collection has been re-organised and re-hung as part of the Re-organisation of the Collection Project, and to the division of the Villanueva building in relation to with the building’s electricity circuits and systems. 

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Detail of Saint Jerome writing (after its restoration), José de Ribera. Oil on canvas, 131,5 x 98 cm. XVII Century. Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado.

Saint Jerome writing, an early work by Ribera

Formerly in the collection of Isabella Farnese, this work has been on deposit since 1940 at the Casa-Museo Colón in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. That loan agreement was cancelled last year in order for the work to be studied and restored. 

Saint Jerome writing was in the Casa-Museo Colón in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria with an attribution to the Valencian painter Esteban March. The expert on Caravaggism, Gianni Papi, has, however, recently identified and published it as an early work by José de Ribera, basing his attribution on the work’s close stylistic and compositional similarities with various works painted by Ribera around 1615, including some of the paintings in his series on “The Senses”. The present painting shares their descriptive preciseness and markedly tenebrist use of light, the origins of which lie in Ribera’s highly personal interpretation of Caravaggio’s models. In the light of the painting’s importance, it has been brought to the Prado for restoration and display in the galleries devoted to naturalism and Ribera. To replace the painting, the Casa-Museo Colón has received the long-term deposit of Saint Andrew, also by Ribera. From the viewpoint of the Prado’s collections, this is an important addition, given that together with his painting of The Raising of Lazarus, it will allow the public to gain an idea of the originality and high quality of Ribera’s work during his early years, which is a unique period in his career and one not represented in the Prado’s collection until around twelve years ago. 

The painting arrived at the Museum with problems around its edges due to damp and an old attack of woodworm. The pictorial surface was generally well preserved but had an abnormal appearance due to the oxidization of the varnishes, surface irregularities caused by an old lining and an earlier selective cleaning that had concentrated on some zones to the detriment of others. During the restoration process the edges have been consolidated and straightened, dirt and oxidized varnishes have been removed, some small losses have been replaced and the painting has been cleaned. The result is the recovery of numerous spatial planes and as a consequence, a sense of volume in the saint’s figure. 

Forthcoming restoration, The Disrobing of Christ by El Greco at the Museum

Together with its extremely active schedule of restoring works from its own collection, on exceptional occasions the Museo del Prado also restores major works that are entrusted to it due to the experience and prestige of its restorers. This is the case with The Disrobing of Christ by El Greco, which will soon be arriving at the Museum from Toledo cathedral for technical study and restoration. 

The restoration of the painting will be undertaken in the Prado’s studios on the request of the cathedral Chapter and in consequence of an agreement reached with the Chapter and with the Fundación El Greco 2014, which will be responsible for the insurance and transport of the work, while Fundación Iberdrola will sponsor its restoration as part of its ongoing support for the Museum’s restoration programme. As is habitually the case, work will start with X-radiographic, infra-red and ultraviolet studies of the painting in order to ensure correct procedures are carried out on it. The picture surface will then be cleaned and oxidized varnished removed, while the paint surface will be consolidated. The restoration per se will be undertaken by Rafael Alonso, an experienced restorer at the Prado and an expert in the work of El Greco. Once completed and by express desire of the parties involved, the painting will be exhibited for three weeks at the Museum before it returns to Toledo cathedral in early 2014, the year that marks the 400th anniversary of the artist’s death. 

Other recent restoration projects

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Francisco Herrera the Younger (Spanish; 1627–1685), The Triumph of Saint Ermengild. Oil on canvas, 1654. Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid, Spain

The Triumph of Saint Ermengild by Herrera the Younger is one of the key works in the history of Spanish Golden Age painting. Executed in 1654 for the high altar of the church of the Barefoot Carmelite monks in Madrid (now the parish church of San José), it marks the emergence of a new and fully Baroque dynamism and use of colour in Spanish painting that would have a profound influence on the work of artists in Madrid and Seville in the second half of the century. As such, it is one of the most influential paintings within the history of Spanish art. 

The Triumph of Saint Ermengild was one of the first paintings acquired for the Museo del Prado, entering its collection in 1832. Its overall state of conservation is good but over time the varnishes had oxidised while they were also covered over a layer of dust and incrusted glue located between the impasto. The result was a general darkening of the work and a loss of its spatial planes, which notably affected its visual reading, conceived by the artist as a virtuoso display of light, colour and space. Restoration has not only focused on repairing and preventing structural damage but also on reinstating the work’s visual legibility. 

Due to the high quality of the materials and the outstanding technical skill of the artist, the results of the restoration are fully evident: the luminous colours, play of impastoed brushstrokes alternating with transparent layers, the volumes, perspective, and ethereal appearance of the work, which almost suggests mural painting, are now much more visible and comprehensible. 

María Luisa de Parma wearing a panniered Dress by Goya is one of the artist’s most highly thought out and technically complex royal portraits. Painted in December 1789, immediately after the new monarchs’ accession, it presents the Queen in the French style, wearing a large, hooped skirt and a spectacular hat that entirely covers her head with drapery and feathers. 

The painting still has all its original impasto on the pictorial surface, thus retaining its sense of relief, through which Goya achieved a subtle distribution of light. With the cleaning of the thick layer of yellowed varnishes that covered the surface, the work has regained the beauty of its colouring and its tonal gradations, evident in the textiles and in the delicacy of the flesh tones. In this work Goya demonstrates all his powers of representing the surface qualities of objects such as silk, jewels and gold in one of his most modern works in terms of the variety and abstract quality of the brushstrokes. In addition to recovering the work’s original light and colour, this recent restoration has once again demonstrated the artist’s technical virtuosity and the methods he employed in the creation of his works. 

María Luisa de Parma wearing a panniered Dress is a technically rich and complex work and a masterly study of light. The paint almost entirely the reddish ground of the canvas, except in certain areas where the artist used it to model the outlines such as the arms. The figure is lit with varying degrees of intensity from a powerful source of light located beyond the upper left corner. 

"The Other Half (Art) Histories of Couples" at Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien

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Foto: KHM Wien

VIENNA.- Gods, Siblings, rulers or members of the bourgeoisie --- they all commissioned portraits of pairs or couples. Throughout history ‘‘pairs’’ have proved an interesting topic for artists. They have documented a real or hoped-for affinity and were created for many different locations. This is the first comprehensive survey selected from the countless historical examples of images of pairs in the collections of the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. 

Eighty works dating from a period spanning four millennia document not only constants but also differences in form, function and intended location. Funerary statues encounter paintings, rarely-seen artworks are juxtaposed with celebrated highlights from the museum’s collections. But what unites statues from Ancient Egypt and Classical Antiquity, tapestries, ivories and masterpieces by Rubens and Cranach is their patrons’ desire to document a common bond with another. 

The show’s title „The Other Half‘‘ refers to the traditional idea of a pair comprising two adults who are either married or in love. They constitute the majority of sitters in depictions of couples since classical antiquity. The title is, however, also a reference to a characteristic element in the countless depictions of pairs known as diptychs - i.e. a painting comprising two separate but joint panels - which originated in Late Antiquity. When commissioning a portrait of themselves and their partner, many mediaeval and Renaissance rulers, noblemen and burghers commissioned a diptych. In addition to pictures of married couples or lovers the exhibition also showcases images of other constellations, among them siblings, friends, or painters with their models. Illustrations of pairs like ill-matched couples were, however, not intended as individual portraits but as didactic moralizing warnings of the dangers of love. The final section of the show focuses on Zeus and his amours and on Adam and Eve; selected artworks illustrate how these couples from, respectively, Greek and Roman mythology and the Old Testament continue to exercise the imagination of artists. 

The exhibition is the fifth in our INTERMEZZO series, in which the Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien showcases a selection of artworks from its own holdings in a single gallery, creating a stimulating dialogue. This exhibition is curated by a team of in-house curators from the following collections: The Egyptian and Near Eastern Collection, the Collection of Greek and Roman Antiquities, the Picture Gallery, the Kunstkammer Wien, the Coin Collection, the Library, the Collection of Historical Arms and Armour, and Ambras Palace. 

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Giovanni Busi, called Cariani (Venice or Bergamo Province c. 1485 – 1548 Venice (?) ), Poet Playing a Hurdy-Gurdy with a Young Woman, c. 1520, 80,5 x 74,5 cm© KHM with MVK and ÖTM.

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Peter Paul Rubens (1577 Siegen –1640 Antwerpen), Ansegisus & Saint Bega, c. 1612/15, 94 cm x 76,8 cm © KHM with MVK and ÖTM.

"Bug Balls", miniature insect sculptures by UK-based artist Claire Moynihan


Extraordinary Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

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Boy on Water Buffalo. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

 

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Gorilla. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường.

 

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Great White Shark. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

 

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Eagle. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

 

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Scorpio-snake. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

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Psychopsis krameriana. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường.

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Geosternbergia. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

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Young Pteranodon. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

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Tortoise. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

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Jucumari. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

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Pig. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

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Tiny horse folded from one piece of Vietnamese money. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường.

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Skull. Origami by Nguyễn Hùng Cường

Glass Brooch, René Lalique, first quarter of the 20th century

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Glass Brooch, René Lalique, first quarter of the 20th century. Photo Sotheby's

The cast, stained and foiled red glass plaque depicting the frontal profile of the Devil, signed Lalique with maker's mark to the reverse. Estimate 2,500-3,500 GBP

LITTERATURECf: Gere, Charlotte, Tait, Hugh (ed.), 'The Art of the Jeweller, A Catalogue of the Hull Grundy Gift to the British Museum,' London, 1984, number 1177, for a similar brooch.

Sotheby's. Fine Jewels. London | 11 juil. 2013, 10:30 AM - www.sothebys.com

Enamel and diamond bracelet, Masriera

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Enamel and diamond bracelet, Masriera. Photo Sotheby's

Designed as a series of foliate and floral open work plaques applied with plique-à-jour enamel and accented with circular-cut and rose diamonds, connected by black velvet ribbon, length approximately 190mm, maker's mark for Masriera. Estimate 12,000-18,000 GBP

Sotheby's. Fine Jewels. London | 11 juil. 2013, 10:30 AM - www.sothebys.com

Gold, ruby and sapphire bracelet, Louis Wièse, 1890s

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Gold, ruby and sapphire bracelet, Louis Wièse, 1890s. Photo Sotheby's

In the Gothic-revival taste, composed of a series of quatrefoils inset with cabochon rubies, sapphires and portraits, length approximately 190mm, signed Wièse, maker's marks. Estimate 10,000-15,000 GBP

Sotheby's. Fine Jewels. London | 11 juil. 2013, 10:30 AM - www.sothebys.com

Citrine ring, Suzanne Belperron, 1930s

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Citrine ring, Suzanne Belperron, 1930s. Photo Sotheby's

The angular mount set to the centre with a step-cut citrine, size K. Estimate 3,500-5,000 GBP

NOTE: Accompanied by a certificate from Olivier Baroin.

Sotheby's. Fine Jewels. London | 11 juil. 2013, 10:30 AM - www.sothebys.com

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