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Cartier

Something interesting I missed at SIHH....

 

I inadvertently missed this one at SIHH. It is one of the few, in fact I believe the only, timepiece from the high watchmaking collection that is designed as a jewellery watch. This thus combines Cartier's most well known strength of jewellery along with its newly found (or at least newly energised) prowess in watchmaking.
 

 
It's a Pasha with the movement skeletonised to resemble a panther's head. The baseplate and bezel are set with 4 carats of diamonds, while the bridges visible on the reverse are also skeletonised in a panther motif. A pair of emeralds form the eyes of the panther.
 

 
The Panthere skeleton is by far the most interesting wristwatch of the range today. As is evident from Tony P's excellent photos, the movement is skeletonised and finished in a style similar to that found in the Santos skeletons, in other words possessing a high level of finishing.
 

 

 
 
 
Here are the tech specs for the watch:
 
Pasha de Cartier 42 mm skeleton watch with panther decor


Case: 18 carat rhodium-plated white gold – Diameter: 42 mm – Bezel: set with round diamonds – Dial: panther head in 18 carat rhodium-plated white gold set with diamonds, created using the bridges of the movement – Crystal: Sapphire – Water resistance: 30 metres / 100 feet / 3 bar – Strap: anthracite-grey brushed canvas – Ardillon buckle: 18 carat rhodium-plated white gold set with diamonds – Movement: mechanical with manual rewinding, 9613 MC – Total diamonds: 4.1 carats

Behind this watch lies another thread that runs through Cartier's long history. The Panthere de Cartier range has of course long been part of Cartier's collection, beginning in 1914 with a panther motif ladies' wristwatch shown below. This particular Dalmatian-like style is not to my taste though and I am glad Cartier has since moved on. 
 

 
The collection was further developed in the early 20th century, coinciding with the Art Deco movement and the craze for Egyptian and Oriental designs. In 1919 the first whole cat appeared on a vanity case belonging to Jeanne Troussaint, nicknamed the "Panther", who would later becoming Director of Jewellery at Cartier in 1933. Along with designer Peter Lemarchand, who would spend hours at the zoo sketching big cars, the pair would go on to make the panther one of the iconic themes of Cartier.
 
Below: Brooch c. 1948 from Duchess of Windsor's collection
 

 
Over the years the panther motif has been used in various items, including this stunning ring from 1991. 
 

 
Another more recent example is this impressive fountain pen from 2009. Made in a limited edition of 5 pieces, it is 218 g of solid 18k yellow gold set with 437 white diamonds (9.3cts), 147 yellow diamonds (2.7cts) and emerald eyes (0.6ct) as well as an onyx nose, set on rock crystal base. What's that old cliche about the pen and the sword?
 

 
Cartier also used tiger stripes in its jewellery. The Duchess of Windsor was one of the most famous buyers of the tiger motif jewellery, and she was one of the first owners of the articulated tiger bracelet of 1956. Here she is in 1959 with the bracelet.
 

 
But probably the most famous Panthere de Cartier product is the Panthere watch, which ironically has no hint of the panther in its design at all. Created in 1983 as a variant of the Santos, but slimmer and more elegant, it went on to become a best selling ladies' watch. Here's a variant of one (photo credit: Wikimedia commons).
 

 
And Cartier's recent ad campaign for the Les Must de Cartier includes a panther cub.
 

 

 
The storied history of the panther and Cartier is detailed in the chronology of the development of the Panthere de Cartier since 1914.
 
1914: Cartier creates the first panther-spots motif on a wristwatch1. Its abstract black and white paving in onyx and diamonds, inspired by nature, introduces flecking in jewellery and heralds the contrasts of the Art Deco style to come.The same year, Louis Cartier orders a “Woman with Panther” from George Barbier. The watercolour2 is used as an exhibition card and later for advertising purposes.  

1915: The Cartier Paris workshops produce a rectangular brooch-watch suspended from a ring, decorated with irregular black spots that suggest leopard skin. It is bought by Pierre Cartier, then Director of Cartier New York, for his personal collection.  

1919: First appearance of the whole cat in onyx and diamonds on a vanity case belonging to Jeanne Toussaint. A source of inspiration for Louis Cartier, she joined the company in 1918 and nurtures a passion for the aesthetic universe of the panther.  

1925: In the Pavilion of Elegance at the Exhibition of Decorative Arts, Cartier links the theme of big cats with botany and displays a tiara of orchids with spotted motifs. This same year, the jeweller also presents a sumptuous vanity case with a panther decoration in black enamel, echoing the drawings of George Barbier and Paul Jove, who illustrated Kipling’s The Jungle Book. 

1927: The designer Peter Lemarchand, a graduate of l’École Boulle, joins Cartier. His acute powers of observation – he spends many hours at the zoo in Vincennes – his sketching and his empathy with Jeanne Toussaint together with the talent of the Cartier gem-setters enables the panther to become one of the great legends of Cartier creativity.The first figurative brooches appear with a reclining panther in onyx and diamonds on platinum.  

1931: In an extravagant setting inspired by the jungle at the Colonial Exhibition in Vincennes, French jewellery pieces incorporating the claws and teeth of big cats become all the rage. Cartier displays a necklace with a tiger’s paw motif. 

1948: An order from the Duke of Windsor for his wife encourages Cartier to develop a three-dimensional panther motif for the very first time: the brooch3 features a golden cat with black enamel spots crouching on an emerald cabochon. Known as one of the world’s most elegant women, the Duchess of Windsor makes the panther highly fashionable. 

1949: The Windsors buy a second Panthère brooch in platinum, whose eyes glitter with yellow diamonds as it reclines on a sapphire cabochon weighing 152.35 carats.Describing the inauguration of the Cartier exhibition in 1949, a journalist writes of an “atomic bomb in the central window.” The creation that attracts Parisian Society is a Panthère brooch composed of diamonds and sapphires, Cartier’s interpretation of the legend of the Golden Fleece. It is acquired by Mrs Reginald Fellowes, born Daisy Decazes, the rich and influential head of the Harper’s Bazaar office in Paris. 

1952: The Duchess of Windsor completes her collection of big-cat jewellery with the first entirely jointed, flexible bracelet that follows the curves of the feline body, dotted with onyx spots. Two years later, the devoted admirer acquires a lorgnette with, as its handle, a tiger in 18 carat gold, black enamel and emerald eyes. 

1956: For the same famous client Cartier creates an articulated tiger bracelet4 which starts a fashion5 for the pairing of onyx and yellow diamonds mounted on gold and for onyx and white diamonds mounted on platinum in the first Panthère pieces.   

1957: Barbara Hutton6, then the world’s richest heiress, places her first order: a tiger brooch-clip7 whose body – head, legs and tail – is fully jointed.  

1958: The stunningly beautiful princess Nina Aga Khan is the next to develop a passion for panthers. As the fashion is for ornamentation, her second husband, le prince Sadruddin Aga Khan, orders a collection of sumptuous pieces: a blouse pin, an articulated panther brooch, a ring, an open bracelet with panther heads, and a gold fluted bracelet with panther heads that can be worn as earrings while it becomes the handle of one of Cartier’s convertible evening bags! Paved with brilliant-cut diamonds and spotted with sapphires (a pairing that is replaced by onyx until 1973), these pieces are among the most spectacular naturalist creations ever made in three dimensions. 

1961: Barbara Hutton adds drop earrings and a bracelet to her collection. For her sister-in-law, Princess Nina Mdivani, she orders a black satin bag whose clasp is adorned with a prowling cat in yellow gold striped with black enamel.  

1967: The actress María Félix, known as “the Mexican panther“, orders a solid bracelet with ends that represent the head and front paws of two panthers.   

1980 marks progress in the research on the attitude and movement of a panther8. It can now be found sitting or semi-crouching, incorporating the stones or the Cartier logo.  

1983: Cartier launches the Panthère watch, a variant of the Santos de Cartier watch with extra-flat bracelet links all in gold. This renders the bracelet extraordinarily supple and truly feline. The Panthère watch becomes one of the most successful examples of watchmaking creativity in the 1980s. 

1985: Introduction of the Silverium line of jewellery, which combines gold and silver in highly stylised, almost geometric, animal forms. The design moves towards a cleaner model characterised by large flat surfaces.  

1986: The panther appears surrounded by jewelled bamboo and eucalyptus foliage. The pieces created at this time include the Khana necklace whose articulated, diamond-paved shank features two tigers crouching in a “V”. 

1987: Launch of the Panthère de Cartier9 perfume. Two big cats clasp a bottle in the form of a facetted diamond. The creation appeals to Cartier’s grandest, most whimsical and fascinating clients, such as the Duchess of Windsor and Barbara Hutton. At a charity auction in favour of the Institut Pasteur, Cartier bought back two key pieces for its feline menagerie that had belonged to the Duchess of Windsor: the 1949 Panthère brooch featuring a sapphire cabochon and the 1954 tiger lorgnette, which are both now part of the Cartier Collection.  

1990s: Cartier develops the idea of collections in which the panther stars as one of the key themes, including bangles with two heads10 in yellow gold spotted with black lacquer, and rigid necklaces clipped with a panther in yellow diamonds.   

2003: Launch of a black and white Panthère collection in platinum, diamonds and onyx. Cartier moves towards an abstract style and geometric lines.  

2005: Always increasingly modern, rare and fiercely civilised, the Panthère jewellery in yellow gold and diamonds develops radical shapes: sharp corners, a streamlined profiles and a gaping jaw11.   

2009: The snow panther makes its appearance in celebration of an innovative fluffy coat that Cartier conveys through an original geometrical mesh.

Very few companies can boast such a history. And even fewer have made such adept use of history. And to go back to what started me on this story, the Panthere de Cartier skeleton - I will have live photos of it soon.
 
- SJX
This message has been edited by SJX on 2010-04-05 10:49:57

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