Biennale des Antiquaires 2012 opens to the world
The doors of the Biennale des
Antiquaires in Paris open on a bright early autumn day. The
Biennale is host to 150 exhibitors, nearly double the 86 present at
the last event in 2010. The 26th Biennale des Antiquaires runs from
14th September to the 23rd at the Grand Palais and alongside the
world's most exclusive antique and art dealers are ten of the most
desirable jewellers including Cartier,
Chanel,
Harry
Winston, Boucheron, Piaget, Van
Cleef and Arpels, Dior and for the first time ever Bulgari and
Chinese jeweller Wallace Chan. All of these houses have created
their most refined jewels for this event which is the most
important high jewellery client event in the calendar that comes
but once every two years.
This enclave of jewellers has
created an avenue of gems that as always is one of the busiest
parts of the show. Each house creates a 'mini maison' and though
all are different in their style, and sometimes their wild
creativity - last Biennale Van Cleef & Arpels took us on
journey with Jules Vernes - they are all opulently appointed and
temples to luxury. Chanel always has a comfortable sofa and art
work to create a soothing atmosphere in which to gaze at their
diamond creations while Harry Winston whisks you straight into a
New York mood.
The big names this year aren't just
on the show floor, but behind-the-scenes as this year organisers
have lured fashion designer and decorative-arts lover Karl
Lagerfeld to design and create the Biennale's fantastical
scenography. The man himself said "I wanted to emphasise the
immensity and the splendour of the glass roof, which will be like a
protective sky… it is a place I adore". Lagerfeld sums up his
approach when he says: "The era is different, I wanted to
evoke, not reconstitute," said Scenographer Karl Lagerfeld. "The
intended effect is "that the visitor immediately feels enveloped by
the atmosphere as soon as he enters the Grand Palais."
Apparently, the deal with Karl
Lagerfeld was a friendly gentlemen's agreement and Christian
Deydier, Président of the Syndicat National des
Antiquaires, explains the inspired venture, "Karl Lagerfeld's
creative genius, sensibility, finely honed taste and stage sense
are all reasons why I am thrilled that he agreed to shape the 2012
Biennale according to his own taste. He is also a leading
collector, someone who loves rare and beautiful objects, which
means that he will approach this unique task as a connoisseur".
Although no images or mock-ups have been released, those in the
know have been promised something truly special and anticipation is
growing.
Many of the pictures you see here
are from Biennales past, but they give an idea of the sort of
wonders that are to be found in a setting as fantastical as this.
Pieces such as Boucheron's Adam necklace, which takes their
usual and playful animalistic design, incredible settings and a
heavy does of biblical etymology to produce something so wickedly
tempting. New York giants Harry Winston will once again be the American
in Paris, having had a boutique there since 1957 and a place at the
Biennale since 1974. "At Harry Winston, we share in the same values
of authenticity, exclusivity and a quest for the exceptional. We
look forward to sharing a selection of our rarest and most
spectacular designs with all the devotees of fine jewellery and art
who will attend," said Frédéric de Narp, President and CEO of Harry
Winston, Inc. Expect to see this delicious sapphire and diamonds
necklace stunningly realised this year, with 13 pear-cut sapphires,
146.71 carats; 225 brilliant, marquise, and pear-cut diamonds,
42.49 carats, all in a platinum setting.