Pick of the Week – Volume 93

Joden Girl

Baubles, Bling and Discounted Things

The changing of the seasons is a magical time.  Living in Western Pennsylvania, we are blessed to see dramatic differences in our surroundings as each season comes and goes.  Yesterday, the first snow fell from the sky, landing softly on the ground below.  It melted away almost as quickly as it came.  Last night, the temperature dropped and a bit more snow fell.  This morning, when I peeked through my bedroom curtain, bleary-eyed from too little sleep, I was delighted to see a thin blanket of white fluffiness covering everything.  It looked so clean and fresh – like a new beginning.  

This Art Nouveau darling was surely inspired by the first few days of spring.  Bursting with color, this portrait is so joyful.  Perched on a daisy stem, a winged cherub wearing a blossom for a hat is delighted by a lifelike dragonfly in the midst of a gentle rain.  This clever fairy is wielding an arrow behind him, leaving the beholder to ponder what mischief he’s planning.  My favorite detail of this antique brooch requires nothing more than running my finger across the surface to appreciate it… each drop of rain actually rises from the enameled painting.  This attention to detail is the very thing that elevates this art to another level.

Painted on a 14-karat yellow gold disk of gold, this masterpiece was crafted by layering one saturated color after another.  The technique is called peinture sur émail; after each hue is carefully applied, the piece is fired.  In complex designs like this, it may have been fired as many as twenty times.  Truly a labor of love, there’s no question that such dedication was well worth it.  Created by Lucien Boullemièr, a famous potter and former footballer, this brooch is quite rare.  Much of his handcrafted pottery is available in the market today, however, I cannot find another piece of jewelry.  

As a featured Pick of the Week, we’re offering it at a new and unbelievable price.  With a savings of nearly one thousand dollars, this 19th century beauty (previously priced at $3300) is now available for just $2,375.00.  If the first flurries of winter have left you longing for spring showers, perhaps this tiny painting will provide solace until the seasons turn again. 

“You can go to a museum and look, or come to us and touch.”

Written by Carrie Martin

Photos by Dana Jerpe

Athletic Aesthetics

Joden Girl

Baubles, Bling, and Sporting Things

Just outside the window, the sun is blazing in the sky.  Finally!  And tomorrow’s forecast is calling for rain.  As the saying goes…  April showers bring May flowers.  That’s exactly the phrase that came to mind the first time I saw this sweet Art Nouveau brooch.

This cherubic fairy sitting atop a Spring daisy makes me smile.  Artfully done in pastel enamel with a delicate gold frame, it’s simply perfect.  Closer inspection reveals the true art of the piece.

Like many Art Nouveau designs, enameling is the star of show.  It’s a process in which glass is fused to a metal surface.  Glass beads (generally made from silica, quartz, borax, lead, and feldspar) are ground to a powder.  Metal oxides are added to create color.  The artist employed Peinture sur émail, a technique in which the colors are painted on, layer after layer.  The hues with the highest flowing temperature are applied first to keep one shade from melting into another.  The piece is baked after each application – sometimes firing it over twenty times!  Can you see the tiny drops of rain on the flower hat as well as the ones dripping from the daisy petals?  They are actually 3-dimensional, slightly raised from the surface of the painting…  such remarkable attention to detail!

This photo shows where the artist signed his miniature work of art…  “L Boullemier”.  I googled his name immediately ( What did I do before Google?)  and was delighted at what I found. 

His full name was Lucien Boullemier – a semi-famous English footballer (a.k.a. soccer player, in America) turned ceramic artiste.  Not finding a lot of success in his athletic career, he retired from soccer; ultimately, he followed in his father’s footsteps and began working as a designer at Mintons, Soho Pottery, and finally Maling Pottery.  

  

He was a prolific potter, many pieces are available in the market today – however, I have been unable to find another single piece of jewelry.  That makes this darling brooch quite rare.  Priced at $3300 – it’s available now in our showroom.  Make the most of these April showers and come see it for yourself!

Written by Carrie Martin

Photos by Shelly Isacco

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