French gold brooch pendant Late Victorian Belle Epoque Style Guirlande by Onbekende Kunstenaar
French gold brooch pendant Late Victorian Belle Epoque Style Guirlande by Onbekende Kunstenaar
French gold brooch pendant Late Victorian Belle Epoque Style Guirlande by Onbekende Kunstenaar
French gold brooch pendant Late Victorian Belle Epoque Style Guirlande by Onbekende Kunstenaar
French gold brooch pendant Late Victorian Belle Epoque Style Guirlande by Onbekende Kunstenaar
French gold brooch pendant Late Victorian Belle Epoque Style Guirlande by Onbekende Kunstenaar
French gold brooch pendant Late Victorian Belle Epoque Style Guirlande by Onbekende Kunstenaar
French gold brooch pendant Late Victorian Belle Epoque Style Guirlande by Onbekende Kunstenaar
French gold brooch pendant Late Victorian Belle Epoque Style Guirlande by Onbekende Kunstenaar
French gold brooch pendant Late Victorian Belle Epoque Style Guirlande by Onbekende Kunstenaar

Franse gouden broche hanger laat-Victoriaanse Belle Epoque stijl Guirlande 1880

Onbekende Kunstenaar

Goud
€ 2.350

Adin Fine Antique Jewellery

  • Over kunstwerk

    Antique jewelry object group: combined brooch-pendant

    Condition: excellent condition
      -  (more info on our condition scale)

    Country of origin: France

    Style: Belle Époque - The Belle Époque (French for "Beautiful Era") was a period in European social history that began during the late 19th century and lasted until World War I. Occurring during the time of the French Third Republic and theGerman Empire, the "Belle Époque" was named in retrospect, when it began to be considered a "golden age" the major powers of Europe, new technologies improved lives and the commercial arts adapted Renaissance and eighteenth-century styles tomodern forms. In the newly rich United States, emerging from the Panic of 1873, the comparable epoch was dubbed the Gilded Age. In the United Kingdom, this epoch overlaps the end of what is called the Victorian Era there and the period named theEdwardian Era. or more info on styles

    Style specifics: The Belle Époque (French for "Beautiful Era") was a period in European social history that began during the late 19th century from the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871) and lasted until World War I (1914-18).

    Occurring during the time of the French Third Republic and the German Empire, the "Belle Époque" was named in retrospect, when it began to be considered a "golden age" the major powers of Europe, new technologies improved lives and the commercialarts adapted Renaissance and eighteenth-century styles to modern forms.

    In the newly rich United States, emerging from the Panic of 1873, the comparable epoch was dubbed the Gilded Age. In the United Kingdom, this epoch overlaps the end of what is called the Victorian Era there and the period named the Edwardian Era.

    In the Belle Époque cheap coal and cheap labour contributed to the cult of the orchid and made possible the perfection of fruits grown under glass, as the apparatus of state dinners extended to the upper classes; champagne was perfected during the Belle Époque. Exotic feathers and furs were more prominently featured in fashion than ever before, as haute couture was invented in Paris, the centre of the Belle Époque, where fashion began to move in a yearly cycle; in Paris restaurantssuch as Maxim's achieved a new splendour and cachet as places for the rich to parade, and the Opéra Garnier devoted enormous spaces to staircases as similar show places.

    After mid-century, railways linked all the major cities of Europe to spa towns like Biarritz and Deauville; their carriages were rigorously divided into first-class and second-class, but the super-rich now began to commission private railway coaches, asexclusivity was a hallmark of opulent luxury. Bohemian lifestyles gained a different glamour, pursued in the cabarets of Montmartre.

    Period: ca. 1880
      -  (events & facts of this era, poetry of this era, fashion of this era)

    Source of inspiration: Mother Nature (see also: flower symbolism)

    Theme: The Rose - First of all a symbol of love but there are many prophecies, legends and fairy tales made about this beautiful flower.

    A rose that blooms in autumn can mean a marriage. And you must remember the fairy tail of Sleeping Beauty. The bad queen pricked the beautiful, young princess with a thorn from a rose. She slept 100 years and a beautiful, young prince woke her up with akiss. They married and they lived happily ever after. There exists a legend about how the rose got her thorns. The rose grew originally in the Garden of Eden and had no thorns. After the fall the rose got her thorns to remind people of their sin. Herbeauty might been kept as memory of Paradise.

    In the antiquity Eros, the Greek God of Love, was represented as a fresh and rosy (color of roses), lively and cheerful boy with goldish hair (like the stamens). The arrows were like the thorns and his wings were like the petals of the rose. In beauty,shape and scent, the rose is outstanding and hence has become the most commonly used floral symbol in the West. Roses have symbolical meanings in classic and Christian art. For example Venus was associated with roses, symbolizing love and beauty, whereas Virgin Mary sometimes was called a « rose without thorns » because of her purity.

    Material: 18K yellow gold
      -  (more info on precious metals)

    Precious stones: Onenatural seed pearl

    Birthstones: Pearl is the birthstone (or month stone) for June.
      -  (more info on birthstones)

    Hallmarks: The French control mark for 18K gold representing an eagle's head that was in use in France from about 1838.
      -  (more info on hallmarks)

    Dimensions: 4,29 cm (1,69 inch) x 3,38 cm (1,33 inch)

    Weight: 8,90 gram (5,72 dwt)

    Reference Nº: 16333-0027

    Copyright photography: Adin, fine antique jewelry

  • Over kunstenaar

    Het kan voorkomen dat een kunstenaar of maker onbekend is.

    Voor sommige werken is het niet te bepalen door wie het gemaakt is of dat het is gemaakt door (een groep) ambachtslieden. Voorbeelden zijn beelden uit de Oudheid, meubels, spiegels of handtekeningen die vaak niet duidelijk of leesbaar zijn. Maar ook sommige werken zijn helemaal niet gesigneerd.

    Ook kunt u de volgende beschrijving vinden:

    •"Toegeschreven aan …." waarschijnlijk een werk van de kunstenaar maar niet zeker of gedeeltelijk

    •“Atelier van ….” of werkplaats van” een werk uitgevoerd in het atelier of atelier van de kunstenaar, eventueel onder zijn toezicht

    •“Cirkel van ….” een werk uit de periode van de kunstenaar die zijn invloed laat zien, nauw verbonden met de kunstenaar maar niet noodzakelijkerwijs zijn leerling

    •“Stijl van ….” of  “Volger van ….” een werk uitgevoerd in de stijl van de kunstenaar, maar niet noodzakelijk door een leerling; kan eigentijds of bijna eigentijds zijn

    •“Wijze van ….” een werk in de stijl van de kunstenaar maar van latere datum

    •"Na …." een kopie (van welke datum dan ook) van een werk van de kunstenaar

    •“Getekend…”,  “Gedateerd….”  of  “Ingeschreven” dan is het werk gesigneerd/ gedateerd/ ingeschreven door de kunstenaar. De toevoeging van een vraagteken duidt op een element van twijfel

    •"Met handtekening ...", "Met datum ...", "Met opschrift..." of “Draagt signatuur/datum/opschrift” dan is de handtekening/datum/opschrift toegevoegd door iemand anders dan de kunstenaar

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