Suzanne Belperron - Magnificent Jewels Geneva Monday, May 12, 2008 | Phillips

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    • circa 1930

    • Designed as five rows of pearls to the triangular pearl clasp decorated with a circular- diamond accents, mounted in 18K white gold, length 15.4 cm. 

  • Artist Biography

    Suzanne Belperron

    French • 1900 - 1983

    Suzanne Belperron is acknowledged today as one of the most original and influential jewelry designers of the 20th century, a woman designing for women, in a style way ahead of its time, that remains as strikingly modern today as it was almost a century ago.  Yet her name had sunk into oblivion until the 1980s, when, aided by the 1987 sale of the Duchess of Windsor’s jewels, her talent and the timeless modernity of her designs began to be recognized and her story explored.  Born Suzanne Vuillerme, in 1900 in Saint-Claude, in the Jura region of France, she studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Besançon, where her signature themes and influences, such as the fish-scale pattern, were already visible in her prize-winning work. She made her way to Paris in 1919 and was taken on by Jeanne Boivin, who had assumed control of the celebrated jewelry house after the death of her husband, René Boivin in 1917.

     

    Accounts vary as to whether Suzanne started out as a salesgirl, or as a designer-modelmaker, but certainly before long her designs, always under the Boivin name, were hailed as the height of contemporary elegance by a coterie of artistic intelligentsia. In 1924, the year Suzanne married Jean Belperron, an engineer from Besançon, she was made co-director of the Maison Boivin. Her ideas, her daring originality, her values, and her own innate style meshed perfectly with those of Jeanne Boivin.  Her versatility enabled her to move effortlessly from prevailing modernism – the stepped, layered Escalier designs  – to inspirations from ancient civilizations and exotic cultures, Egypt, Asia, and Africa – all the while injecting her feminine sensibility, combining geometry and stylization with fluidity and sensuality. 

     

    In 1932, she left Boivin to work with the gemstone and pearl merchant, Bernard Herz, and here she was given credit as the creator of some of the most sophisticated and sought-after jewels of the day, fashionable yet beyond fashion, the badges of style worn by an illustrious clientèle, including Elsa Schiaparelli, Daisy Fellowes, Diana Vreeland and the Duchess of Windsor. Her celebrated jewels of carved smokey or rose quartz, amethyst, or chalcedony were crafted by the lapidary, Louart, while her jewels were fabricated by Groené et Dard.  She steadfastly refused to sign her jewels, famously saying, “My style is my signature.”

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399

A Diamond and Pearl Bracelet

circa 1930
Designed as five rows of pearls to the triangular pearl clasp decorated with a circular- diamond accents, mounted in 18K white gold, length 15.4 cm. 

Estimate
CHF13,000 - 18,000 

Sold for CHF16,250

Magnificent Jewels

13 May 2008, 2 & 7pm
Geneva