[title]
[message]French jeweller and glass artist, Rene Lalique, is famed for his elegant designs. During the early 20th Century, his unique jewellery and glasswork made a significant contribution to the Art Nouveau movement.
Born in 1860 in Ay, France, he spent his early life learning the art and design methods that would define his process for the rest of his life. Lalique’s family moved to Paris when he was two, but they frequently returned to Ay for summer holidays. These summer trips influenced Lalique’s naturalistic pieces: inspired by plants and flowers and featuring flowing lines and bright gems.
Education
In 1872 aged 12, Lalique began studying at the Collège Turgot, where he was able to devote time to drawing and sketching. Here, his love of the decorative arts grew, and he started attending evening classes at the Ecole des arts décoratifs.
After, he travelled to London to spend two years at the Crystal Palace School of Art, where he became an apprentice goldsmith to Parisian jeweller Louis Aucoc. Here, he was able to refine his naturalistic approach to design.
Art Noveau movement
After returning to France, Lalique worked as a freelance artist and designed pieces for high-end French jewellers such as Cartier, Jacta and Boucheron. In 1885, he started his own business making jewellery and glass pieces.
After developing his style and client base throughout his first decade in business, Lalique went on to create pieces for the Maison de l’Art Nouveau after 1895. This is also where the Art Nouveau movement gained its name.
Lalique’s works were reportedly commissioned more than 140 times over 30 years by the British-Armenian businessman and philanthropist, Calouste Sarkis Gulbenkian. At the time, his work was considered to be fashionably elegant – it was the epitome of the modern-day arts and crafts scene.
Glasswork
Although profiled here for his 1900s jewellery, Lalique is best known for his glasswork, which adopted an Art Deco jewellery aesthetic in the 1920s.
Many of Lalique’s glass creations were on display on the SS Normandie: everything from the walls, the grand salon and the columns in the dining room were made of elegantly coloured Lalique glass.
Legacy
Lalique’s unique and commercial creations can be found in numerous leading museums around the globe, including:
- Lalique Museum of Hakone - Hakone, Kanagawa Japan
- Metropolitan Museum of Art – New York City, USA
- Corning Museum of Glass - New York City, USA
- Calouste Gulbenkian Museum – Lisbon, Portugal
- Rijksmuseum – Amsterdam, Netherlands
- Jewellery Museum Pforzheim – Pforzheim, Germany
- Victoria and Albert Museum – London, UK
- Museum of Decorative Arts – Paris, France
- Lalique Museum – Paris, France
Jewellery designs in the style of Lalique
Art Deco 2.24 Carat Sapphire Cluster Ring
This magnificent French antique sapphire ring is in the style of Lalique, with an oval cut centre stone and its strong blue colour gem. Set with six eight-cut diamonds with fine graining and vent detailing, the ring also has scrolling detail in the platinum – a truly beautiful piece.
Art Deco 2.95 Carat Natural Ceylon Sapphire Ring
This stunning Ceylon sapphire is showcased in an equally beautiful ring. The oval cut sapphire – certified as natural and unheated – is set laterally in an impressively ornate mounting. Six old cut diamonds are set to the north and south of the ring, with fine piecing and milgraining in the diamond set shoulders embellished with decorative swirling detailing.
Art Nouveau Natural Pearl & Old Cut Diamond Ring
This glorious Art Nouveau ring evokes Lalique’s signature style. Its finely crafted design features a certified natural saltwater pearl set opposite a white and a vibrant old mine cut diamond. It sits low to the finger on a slim, D-shaped 18k yellow gold shank.
Modern Day Lalique
While Lalique himself passed away in 1945, the Lalique brand is still going strong today and has branched out into a range of other markets. Since Rene Lalique’s death, the brand has gone on to create perfume, art, homeware and has even opened a chain of luxury restaurants and hotels. Of course, Lalique is still producing jewellery in Rene’s signature style.
Lalique jewellery marks
Lalique's designs utilise glass as a medium to create stunning pieces of work adorned with symbols such as birds, flowers, and other intricate patterns. He often used gemstones such as amethyst, quartz and diamonds to add a touch of colour and brilliance to each creation. Each piece is marked with the trademark ‘R Lalique’ which has become synonymous with quality craftsmanship in the world of fine jewellery.
Materials favoured by Rene Lalique
One material favoured by Lalique was enamel - an often overlooked material when it comes to jewellery design. Yet Lalique's works featured delicate details in enamel that brought the pieces to life. He also frequently used opalescent glass which gave much of his work a luminous quality unlike any other artist at the time. Gold was another favourite of Lalique's, as evidenced by some of his more elaborate creations such as hair combs and pendants featuring intricate designs made entirely out of gold filigree work.