7

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

W


hen American
socialite Wallis
Simpson found
herself at a
particularly tiresome social
engagement one evening in the
1920s, there was no polite way
to gauge the time. Ladies didn’t
wear timepieces and, even if they
did, it would be a faux pas to check
the clock mid-party.
So Simpson approached her
favoured Parisian maison, Van
Cleef & Arpels, with a design brief
for a jewelled bracelet with a flat,
rectangular front that hid a watch
face from view. Cast in platinum
and accented with diamonds, the
tiny clock was angled towards the
wearer’s eye so a quick downward
glance would reveal how much
small talk was left to endure.
A replica of this watch, called
the Cadenas, along with 360 other
exquisite and innovative designs
dating from the first days of Van

Cleef & Arpels in 1896, are on
display this month at the Today
Art Museum in Beijing. The
large and diverse exhibition,
When Elegance Meets Art, includes
a diamond chandelier necklace
made for Queen Nazli of Egypt
and a bold, lion-themed choker
which belonged to the Queen of
Hollywood, Elizabeth Taylor.
The Barquerolles choker, a
gold-and-diamond set studded with
two perfect emeralds, was a gift
from Richard Burton to mark the
birth of Taylor’s first grandchild in


  1. It was nicknamed “the granny”
    and at the time she said it made her
    heart start “clicking like a castanet”.
    After the success of her first
    foray in design, Wallis Simpson
    regularly called upon the team at
    Van Cleef & Arpels for customised
    accessories. She dreamed up a
    necklace in the style of a zipper,
    composed of diamonds and
    mounted in platinum and white


gold, and the team set to work.
Perfecting this design for Simpson,
however, took Van Cleef & Arpels
almost 20 years, and it wasn’t until
1950 that a working example of the
Zip necklace was completed. Fully
adjustable, the piece could be
worn open around the neck or
closed as a bracelet. Simpson, an
avid jewellery collector, never wore
the design; by the time the maison
had mastered the technique, we’re
told, “she had moved on”.
Simpson was not the only
regular client who was a source
of inspiration. One evening, after
witnessing New York socialite

156 GOURMET TRAVELLER


Clockwise from
top left: Van Cleef
& Arpels’ Mystère
IV gold, platinum
and diamond
necklace,
designed for
France’s first
female test
pilot in 1956,
is featured in
the exhibition;
Beijing’s Today
Art Museum;
Van Cleef’s
Minaudière,
created in 1933.

A French jewellery maison dazzles Beijing with


a retrospective of its inest pieces it for princesses


and Hollywood royalty, writesSARAH OAKES.


Crowning


glory

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