Harper's Bazaar (UK)

SHINING EXAMPLE

Charlotte Brook explores how Tiffany's glittering history influences its bold new creations

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‘Itry to make everything look as if it were growing, uneven, organic, at random, in motion,’ Jean Schlumberg­er once said of his famously floraand fauna-inspired jewellery.

Having been scouted by Elsa

Schiaparel­li as a young man for his decorative porcelain brooches and buttons, the artist and designer was summoned to New York by Tiffany &

Co in 1956, where he was charged with bringing his trademark colour and wit to the brand’s designs.

Inspired by wildlife’s vitality and the shapes and shades of plants, he took this brief and more than fulfilled it, using vibrant gemstones to transform nature’s fleeting beauty into timeless wearable treasures: shimmering gold camel and sapphire jellyfish brooches; butterfly-adorned bracelets; delicate diamond jasmine buds blooming from a necklace. One such masterpiec­e is his ‘Bird on a Rock’ brooch, conjured up in 1965. ‘He travelled extensivel­y, especially to Guadeloupe, and we believe a cockatiel influenced this piece, which is perhaps his most iconic,’ says Vicky Reynolds, Tiffany’s chief gemologist. ‘As well as having this wonderful plumage – reimagined in yellow diamonds and looking rather like a pineapple – cockatiels are very witty, chatty birds. Together, those qualities are quintessen­tial Schlumberg­er.’

Over the decades, there have been many iterations of this sprightly avian, but a particular­ly fine, new edition is currently to be found atop a 54-carat tourmaline in electric blue – the signature Tiffany hue. From early June, it will be awaiting visitors at London’s Saatchi Gallery, where the brand is holding an exhibition showcasing its creativity, craftsmans­hip and the role it has played in popular culture since Charles Lewis Tiffany founded his eponymous boutique in 1837. The show offers a whistlesto­p tour of the house’s history and greatest hits: chic black and white advertisin­g photograph­y from the archive; a selection of the former French crown jewels; and Audrey Hepburn’s own, annotated

Breakfast at Tiffany’s script, along with the sensationa­l 128-carat, buttercup-yellow Tiffany diamond she wore while promoting the film. All these will be joined by other members of Schlumberg­er’s magical menagerie, including Elizabeth Taylor’s sapphire ‘Fleur de Mer’ sea-creature brooch and a theatrical clip made for the former

Bazaar fashion editor Diana Vreeland, a lifelong friend of the designer. The magnificen­t ‘Trophée de Vaillance’ – otherwise known as the ‘Trophy of Love’ – is a brooch bearing a fringed mediaeval breastplat­e, spears and shield, fashioned from rubies and amethysts. As Vreeland put it: ‘It’s not at all subtle. A Schlumberg­er lights up a whole room!’

Fifty years on, the fruits of Schlumberg­er’s exceptiona­l imaginatio­n will illuminate this summer’s landmark exhibition, and they have also inspired several spectacula­r pieces in Tiffany’s latest ‘Blue Book’ high-jewellery collection. With the summer flowers beginning to unfurl, this seems a perfect moment to pay homage to the living legacy of a designer who celebrated the Earth’s bountiful beauty.

‘Tiffany & Co: Vision & Virtuosity’ is at the Saatchi Gallery, London (www.saatchigal­lery.com), from 10 June to 19 August.

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 ?? ?? Clockwise from below left: the ‘Bird on a Rock’ brooch. Audrey Hepburn wearing the Tiffany
Yellow Diamond. Schlumberg­er’s sketch for a brooch. A 1969 Tiffany & Co advertisem­ent
Clockwise from below left: the ‘Bird on a Rock’ brooch. Audrey Hepburn wearing the Tiffany Yellow Diamond. Schlumberg­er’s sketch for a brooch. A 1969 Tiffany & Co advertisem­ent
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 ?? ?? Right: Diana Vreeland’s ‘Trophée de Vaillance’ brooch. Left and below right: Schlumberg­er’s sketches. Below: a vintage Tiffany & Co advertisem­ent
from 1969
Right: Diana Vreeland’s ‘Trophée de Vaillance’ brooch. Left and below right: Schlumberg­er’s sketches. Below: a vintage Tiffany & Co advertisem­ent from 1969
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 ?? ?? Above left: the ‘Fleur du Mer’ brooch owned by Elizabeth Taylor, pictured wearing it, above. Below left: the 1845 Tiffany &
Co sales catalogue
Above left: the ‘Fleur du Mer’ brooch owned by Elizabeth Taylor, pictured wearing it, above. Below left: the 1845 Tiffany & Co sales catalogue
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