Cartier - Jewels London Monday, June 6, 2011 | Phillips

Create your first list.

Select an existing list or create a new list to share and manage lots you follow.

    • Of hexagonal form, and designed as a series of intersecting batons, each baton
      millegrain-set with rose-cut diamonds and terminating in millegrain-set cabochon
      emeralds, length 29 mm, signed ‘Paris, Cartier, Londres’.

  • Artist Biography

    Cartier

    French

    With the Constitution of 1848 came a new standard for luxury in France. Founded one year prior by Louis-Francois Cartier, the house of Cartier was one of the first to use platinum in jewelry making. This incredibly expensive material became the stepping-stone for Cartier to experiment in form, mechanisms and attitude. It helped men move from pocket watches to wristwatches, effectively making the watch much more functional and prominent in a man's overall wardrobe.

    Cartier did not only touch on functionality. Inspired by a commissioned painting by George Barbier featuring a black panther at the feet of an elegantly bejeweled woman, Cartier began incorporating wild animals in his designs—most notably, Cartier Panthère rings, bangle bracelets and watches. Yet it wasn't until the late 1960s that the house of Cartier debuted their iconic yellow and rose gold LOVE collection, which includes the famous bracelet that only a special screwdriver can open. 

    View More Works

277

An Art Deco diamond and emerald brooch, by Cartier

Of hexagonal form, and designed as a series of intersecting batons, each baton
millegrain-set with rose-cut diamonds and terminating in millegrain-set cabochon
emeralds, length 29 mm, signed ‘Paris, Cartier, Londres’.

Estimate
£4,000 - 6,000 

Sold for £5,000

Jewels

7 June 2011
London