Character Art Exchange

10 jewellery designers you really need to know about

10 jewellery designers you really need to know about



Wolfers Frères was founded in 1834 by Louis Wolfers, a Belgian goldsmith. His son Philippe joined the workshop in Brussels in 1875, producing designs that were initially in the Rococo style. By 1890, however, he had begun to subscribe to the Art Nouveau aesthetic.To get more news about fashion jewellery design images 2021, you can visit jewelryhunt.net official website.

The pieces Philippe Wolfers created between 1897 and 1905 are stamped ‘ex[emplaire] unique’, to differentiate them from those made by the Wolfers Company. He created only 131 unique pieces in the most elegant Art Nouveau style, inspired by nature as well as Japanese art. In 1908, Philippe halted his jewellery production to become a sculptor. His jewels rarely appear at auction, and are highly sought after by collectors.

Ernest Vever left his native Metz in 1871 to establish a jewellery firm in Paris. Three years later, his sons Paul and Henri joined the firm, and the House of Vever began producing objects in the Renaissance Revival and Oriental styles. With the Art Nouveau movement at its peak in 1900, Vever won the Grand Prix at the Paris World Fair with jewels featuring flowers and animals in enamel, and very few gemstones.

Embraced by heavyweights such as Antoni Gaudí and René Lalique, the Art Nouveau movement extended from architecture into fashion, jewellery and sculpture — and Henri Vever was one of its masters, and this is reflected by the prices fetched by his jewels at auction.

In 1921, Vever handed over the business to his nephews, focusing instead on collecting Japanese art, as well as writing his three-volume Bijouterie Francaise au XIXe Siècle (1906-1908), an invaluable reference work on the history of jewellery from the Empire to the Art Nouveau styles.Paul-Emile Brandt was born in La Chaux-de-Fonds in Switzerland in 1883. After moving to Paris at the beginning of the 20th century, he started his own business, creating jewellery in the Art Nouveau style, using several techniques in naturalistic designs.

After the First World War he turned to Art Deco, and the jewels and cigarette cases he created during this period are now among his most in-demand pieces at auction. With their distinctive bold colours and geometrical shapes in lacquer, his Art Deco designs embody 1920s style.

Brandt stopped making jewellery after the Second World War, moving into tinware. He died in Paris in 1952.In 1885, Paul Templier succeeded his father, Charles, and his uncle Louis at the helm of the family firm, which had been established in Paris in 1848. He would go on to become an important figure in the Parisian jewellery trade, and was awarded the Légion d’Honneur in 1938.

Paul’s son, Raymond, entered the business in 1919 and immediately decided to create a different style of jewellery, almost totally free of decorative ornamentation. Inspired by the modern, industrial world of automobiles and towering buildings, he used slick and polished metals associated with black lacquer or enamel, and only a few diamonds or coloured stones.

As a leading designer of the Art Deco period, Raymond Templier was also a founding member of the French Union of Modern Artists, a collective that also included Charlotte Perriand, Robert Mallet-Stevens, Eileen Gray and Sonia Delaunay.Lacloche Frères was founded in Madrid in 1875 by four brothers — Fernand, Jules, Leopold and Jacques. During the 1920s and 1930s, they became highly successful, designing pieces decorated with multicoloured enamels as well as carved gemstones inspired by the East.

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