Exposições Cartier em Paris

De março até julho de 2017, o Grand Palais contará com duas novas exposições: “Jardins” e “From the Great Mughals to the Maharajas: Jewels from the Al Thani Collection”.

Para melhor demonstrar esses temas, os curadores da exposição convidaram várias instituições eminentes, incluindo a Cartier Collection, cujas obras foram apresentadas anteriormente na Galeries Nationales para a exposição Cartier: Style and History in 2013–2014.

Treasures from the Cartier Collection unveiled at the Grand Palais Jardins 15 mars > 24 juillet Grand Palais Gustav Klimt, Le Parc, 1910 ou avant, New York, The Museum of Modern Art © 2017. Digital image, The Museum of Modern Art, New York / Scala, Florence. design c-album Dürer, Watteau, Monet, Bonnard, Picasso, Fragonard, Matisse, Hitchcock… 15 March – 24 July, Jardins (Gardens) 29 March – 5 June, From the Great Mughals to the Maharajas: jewels from the Al Thani Collection Treasures from the Cartier Collection unveiled at the Grand Palais 1 Jardins is an unusual meta-exploration that traces the art history of parks and gardens as well as the history of exhibitions on the same theme. Its broad-ranging approach encompasses paintings, sculptures, photographs, drawings, precious objects and installations that appeal to the senses, such as the sense of smell. The garden is defined as a complete work of art, which poses the central question of its representation. Curator Laurent Le Bon has selected 17 pieces from the Cartier Collection depicting a natural world that is figurative and lifelike yet not without poetry. Flowers are part of the Cartier vocabulary and one of the jeweller’s most beloved themes. Floral creations inhabit this borderline between naturalism and poetic evocation. Cartier has returned to this floral repertoire time and again since its inception and throughout its stylistic history. At the dawn of the 20th century the Belle Epoque saw the birth of the Garland style as a genre in its own right, fashioned from platinum and diamonds. In the 1920s lush, fertile depictions of the natural world blossomed into the Tutti Frutti style, which enhanced dazzling precious materials with contrasts and colour combinations. Colourful carved stones – sapphires, emeralds and rubies – conjured a fantasy of India. In the 1930s, the Maison draws inspiration from lines and proportions. Jeanne Toussaint, who was appointed Creative Director in 1933, interpreted the floral repertoire to stunning effect with her highly original three-dimensional renderings. In 1941 Cartier executed a flower brooch with an entirely articulated stem that trembled when worn. The flower, depicted in profile with drooping petals, appears as if shaken by the wind or hanging heavy in the sunshine. This dramatic and surreal take on the natural world re-emerged in the 1970s when Cartier created a flower brooch with wooden petals and a gold pistil, in a bold juxtaposition of precious metal and raw material. Cartier’s floral compositions harness the skilful craftsmanship of the Maison and technical prowess of each era, as seen in the richness and vitality of this creative vein. Flowers, foliage, floral arrangements, bouquets and palm fronds – that are part of the Cartier vocabulary – celebrate a strikingly lifelike natural world just beyond our reach. Calling to mind Jean Cocteau’s notion of réalisme irréel by which the natural is rendered surreal, they attest to Cartier’s fascination with nature and its manifestation in jewellery form. 15 March – 24 July, Jardins (Gardens) Flower clip brooch Cartier Paris, special order, 1941 Platinum, gold Diamonds Cartier Collection Nils Herrmann, Cartier Collection © Cartier The exhibition catalogue Jardins available in French, is published by Réunion des musées nationaux – Grand Palais. 2 Treasures from the Cartier Collection unveiled at the Grand Palais Two Fern spray brooches Cartier Paris, 1903 Platinum Diamonds Sold to Sir Ernest Cassel Cartier Collection Nils Herrmann, Cartier Collection © Cartier Flower clip brooch Cartier Paris, 1938 Gold, platinum Diamonds Rubies Sold to a member of the Rothschild family Cartier Collection Nils Herrmann, Cartier Collection © Cartier Clip brooch and pair of ear clips Cartier, circa 1970 Gold Wood Cartier Collection Nick Welsh, Cartier Collection © Cartier Treasures from the Cartier Collection unveiled at the Grand Palais 3 From the Great Mughals to the Maharajas : Jewels from the Al Thani Collection is an expedition to the heartland of the Indian jewellery tradition. Showcasing more than 270 pieces from the Al Thani Collection alongside loans from institutions and private collections including the Cartier Collection, the exhibition traces a history of court jewellery, staging a dialogue between artworks and rare gems and great diamonds from the Mughal era to the present day. The immersive layout and lighting design – a reference to the immense sophistication of Indian culture – invite the visitor on a two-part journey corresponding to the dual themes of the exhibition: the artistic sophistication of Mughal India, and exchanges between India and Europe since the Renaissance. Cartier’s Indian-inspired creations, whether part of the Al Thani Collection or the Cartier Collection, illustrate the Maison’s panache in appropriating this infl uence into its stylistic identity. Cartier has loaned three major pieces from its Collection to the exhibition. The Maharaja of Patiala’s legendary ceremonial necklace, composed of 2,930 diamonds, weighed some 1,000 carats in its original confi guration. This breathtaking piece, restored in 2002, was worn as a ceremonial set with a chocker necklace in platinum and diamonds that feature seven light yellow diamonds. This ensemble, newly reunited, will be exhibited at the Grand Palais alongside another Indian-inspired creation and icon of Cartier’s Tutti Frutti jewels : the Hindu necklace commissioned by Daisy Fellowes. The necklace is generously laden with carved rubies, sapphires and emeralds and is a feminine and fl amboyant gauge of the extent of Indian infl uence on the creative accomplishments of the Maison. The exhibition will also present other Cartier jewels, both antique and contemporary, including the turban ornament created in 1937 for the Maharaja of Nawanagar with the famous tobacco-coloured Tiger Eye diamond of 61,50 carats, as its centrepiece. The Cartier Collection is honoured to be part of an exhibition that has travelled to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, and the Miho Museum in Japan. A proud patron of the exhibition, Cartier values the Collector’s expert knowledge and desire to share his collection. 29 March – 5 June, From the Great Mughals to the Maharajas: Jewels from the Al Thani Collection Hindu necklace Cartier Paris, special order, 1936, altered in 1963 Platinum, gold, diamonds sapphires, emeralds, rubies Made as a special order for Mrs. Daisy Fellowes Cartier Collection Nils Herrmann, Cartier Collection © Cartier Delicate jades, spectacular gems, magnificent jewellery studded with diamonds, rubies, emeralds and pearls, daggers inlaid with jewels, vessels and everyday objects chased with gold, decorated with gemstones and coloured enamels: these exceptional pieces are presented in this catalogue. Through five centuries of history, the art of jewellery, so central to Indian culture, has dazzled us with treasures of ancestral savoirfaire, which combine exuberance, opulence and refinement. We can thus catch a glimpse of the splendour of Mhugal courts and the pomp of the maharajas, while East and West, tradition and the modernity of contemporary creations interact in a subtle play of inspiration. 49 € ISBN 978-2-7118-6372-3 EC 10 6372 SEE OUR PUBLICATIONS ON www.rmngp.fr From the Great Mughals to the Maharajas: JEWELS FROM THE AL THANI COLLECTION From the Great Mughals to the MaharajasJEWELScollection from the Al Thani The exhibition catalogue From the Great Mughals to the Maharajas: jewels from the Al Thani Collection available in French and English, is published by Réunion des musées nationaux – Grand Palais. 4 Treasures from the Cartier Collection unveiled at the Grand Palais Necklace Cartier Paris, special order, 1928 Platinum Diamonds Zirconia Topazes Synthetic rubies Smoky quartz Citrine Created for Sir Bhupindra Singh, Maharaja of Patiala In 1925 the fabulously wealthy Sir Bhupindra Singh, Maharaja of Patiala, entrusted Cartier with his gems to modernise his traditional Indian jewels in a more Western fashion. Three years later, the new jewels were exhibited at the rue de la Paix in 1928, and in particular a magnificent ceremonial necklace mounted on platinum. Composed of no fewer than 2,930 diamonds and two rubies, the necklace had at its centre the De Beers diamond, a yellow stone of 234.65 carats, making it the seventh-largest diamond in the world at the time. The necklace vanished after Indian independence in 1947. In 1998, Éric Nussbaum, the former director of the Cartier Collection, discovered it in a poor state . The restoration was to take Cartier’s artisans over two years. After various efforts, it was decided to use substitution stones that would match the brilliance of the original ones. Zirconia and white topazes were used to replace the diamonds, whereas synthetic rubies took the place of the natural rubies. Further work was done on the platinum chain necklaces, specifically the reconstitution of the pendant that held the De Beers diamond. The restoration task was thus one of honouring the original craftsmanship of the necklace. The necklace, as it now appears in the Collection, was shown in public for the first time in 2002. Cartier Collection Nick Welsh, Cartier Collection © Cartier Treasures from the Cartier Collection unveiled at the Grand Palais 5 Choker necklace Cartier Paris, special order, 1928 Platinum Diamonds, including seven light yellow cushion-shaped and round-shaped diamonds, weighing 76.55 carats Created for Sir Bhupindra Singh, Maharaja of Patiala Cartier Collection Marian Gérard, Cartier Collection © Cartier The Taj Mahal Emerald India, 1650-1700 Weight: 141.1 carats Al Thani collection All rights reserved. Photo Prudence Cuming 6 Treasures from the Cartier Collection unveiled at the Grand Palais.

 

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