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Rare Victorian Necklace with Coral Cameo & Enamel in Gold, ca. 1870


€ 4,290.00 *
Content 1 piece
Incl. VAT, Shipping
Rare Victorian Necklace with Coral Cameo & Enamel in Gold, ca. 1870
Rare Victorian Necklace with Coral Cameo & Enamel in Gold, ca. 1870
Description
This description was automatically translated from German. If you have any questions about this piece of jewellery, we will be happy to help!
Works made of gold with colored enameling have been the pinnacle of goldsmiths' art since the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance. World famous is the "Golden Horse Inn" from Altötting, made in this technique in 1404, and Benvenuto Cellini's "Saliera", today in the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna. In the 19th century, designs in the Renaissance style also became fashionable throughout Europe in the field of jewellery, initially in France and England, and towards the end of the century also in Germany and Austria-Hungary. The necklace presented here is a magnificent and not least precious example of jewellery in this technique. A large enameled pendant is attached to a handmade wide gold chain. We see a putto, a messenger from heaven, with a face made of a carved coral, a body made of a pearl and wings covered with white, red and blue enamel. Cherubs, little angels with or without wings, first appear in European art during the Renaissance - Donatello "invented" these cute "little spirits", first called " spiritelli", and in no time we find them everywhere. Who doesn't know Raphael's Sistine Madonna with the two little angels at the bottom, or even the wonderful music-making putti on Giovanni Bellini's Frari Triptych of 1488 in Venice? Sometimes they play music, then they hold a curtain or help the saints in their various activities. Helping and protecting is also meant the colorful companion in the necklace. And at the same time he inspires with his colorful appearance and precious equipment. The accompanying original chain with also enameled tulips can be unhooked on the right and left. We discovered the necklace in the Netherlands. It is exceptionally well preserved.
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Jewellery in Renaissance shapes with rich enameling is a particularly precious field of collecting. Only a few of these precious pieces have come down to us through the ages without damage or missing pieces, so it is a special good fortune to find one of these period pieces. Especially in the 19th century designs in this technique have been realized. First of all, in France, since the 1850s, there was an enthusiasm for the era of François I and Henri II, which was understood as an age of patriotic greatness. François-Désiré and Émile Froment-Meurice created jewelry around scenes such as the "Toilet of Venus", which at the same time referred eruditely to antiquity and yet in a cheerful way did not ignore the interests of this worldly life. Other goldsmiths like Boucheron, Falize and Wièse followed - and in 1871 Paris was already considered the capital of enamel by the Art Journal. In Great Britain, the development took a similar course. Here, too, the Renaissance was regarded as the national style, as it referred to the glorious era of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I. John Brogden and Carlo Giuliano produced designs in London in the 1860s that were based on the ornaments in Hans Holbein's paintings, which is why the style was also called "Holbeinesque." Queen Victoria was considered the new Queen Elizabeth, and jewellery that linked this past with the present was thus seen as a badge of patriotic pride. Finally, in Germany, jewellery in Renaissance forms became fashionable under the term "Old German Style". Since the 1870s, jewelers such as Huga Schaper in Berlin and August Kleeberg in Vienna supplied high-quality jewellery in the Renaissance style, as did their colleagues in Paris and London, richly decorated with colored enamel. The differences between the respective national styles, which were in any case more claimed than actual, became increasingly blurred by the end of the century. Jewellery with artistic enamel, however, remained fashionable for a long time - because the artists of Art Nouveau, such as René Lalique, also liked to use this technique, albeit in a completely different formal language.
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Size & Details
Rare Victorian Necklace with Coral Cameo & Enamel in Gold, ca. 1870
Magnificent Protector
€ 4,290.00 *
Content 1 piece
Incl. VAT, Shipping
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