Thursday 10 October 2013

Review of Pearls: V&A and Qatar Museums Authority Exhibition



Exhibition open until 19th January 2014 at V&A.

The C&A Pearls Exhibition
I would highly recommend a visit to the latest remarkable exhibition of Pearls at the Victoria and Albert Museum. On display is an enormous collection of multi coloured natural pearls including the pink conch pearl; brown, black, blue green abalone pearl and the orange Melo pearl. Any mollusk with a shell can produce a pearl.  



Natural oyster pearls have been fished in the Arabian Gulf from the earliest times until the 1950s using the same methods of diving to a depth of 22 metres. It takes 2000 oysters to produce a suitable pearl for use in a piece of quality jewellery. As you look at the magnificent five row natural Gulf pearl necklace made by Cartier from the 1930s, you can appreciate the time taken to collect the pearls which need to be matched according to scale and lustre.

Grand Jete, gold with diamonds and two cultured baroque pearl
Pearl trading in the Gulf, from Saudi Arabia to Dubai, Bahrain to Qatar, started as early as the 7th Century where Arab merchants crossed the Indian Ocean to India. Chinese merchants also travelled to India to find highly prized natural pearls from the Gulf. By the early 19th Century the Arabian Gulf was the major global supplier of natural pearls. At their height, the great jewellery houses of Europe sought the best quality oriental pearls between 1850 and 1930. Today the natural pearl has become a prized rarity.

Gold hair ornament, Roman, 3rd Century AD
From Roman times to Medieval Europe pearls symbolized wealth and status. Gorgeous Renaissance jewellery examples abound, set with multi coloured gemstones such as garnets and rubies alongside pearls and richly enamelled gold pendants. There are beautiful examples of late Victorian diamond and pearl brooches and Art Nouveau jewellery, some by Lalique and Vever, showing designs of plants and insects, in gold, enamel and horn sculpted into natural forms. There is also a pearl sautoir necklace worn to the waist amid the 1920s fashionable flapper dresses. There are incredible examples of seed pearls beautifully sewn into jackets and dresses, even one worn by Her Majesty the Queen!

Rosebery pearl and diamond tiara dated 1878
The highlight of the exhibition for me personally was the wonderful collection of pearl and
diamond tiaras. In particular, the Rosebery pearl and diamond tiara dated 1878 with natural
bouton and drop shaped pearls, set in silver and gold surrounded by old cut diamonds. There is even jewellery from the Hollywood stars: a pearl necklace worn by Marilyn Monroe and a pearl and diamond ring that once belonged to Elizabeth Taylor!


Kokichi Mikimoto (1858-1954) in Japan developed a patent for making round cultured pearls from Akoya oysters at the turn of the century which heralded the start of industrial production and in the 1950s cultured pearls were at their fashionable peak. There are South Sea cultured pearl necklaces in many colours, the finest produced by Pinctada Maxima oysters farmed in Burma, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and Australia. There is a stunning necklace by Yoko, London incorporating these multi coloured cultured pearls from the South seas set in 18 carat white gold with diamonds. This is a beautiful and unusual collection which is open daily and well worth a visit!


Written by FOCUS member Gemma Darlington FGA, Jewellery specialist and gemologist of Gems Fine Jewels www.gemsfinejewels.co.uk
 
For more information about FOCUS visit: www.focus-info.org

1 comment:

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