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Sicilian jeweller designer famous for his work in the 1940’s and 50’s. Fulco Santostefano, Duke of Verdura, was born in Palermo in 1898. He spent most of his youth in Sicily and later Venice. Verdura’s wit, erudition and charm made him a prized guest at high-society parties. Living on an increasingly diminished inheritance, he flitted about the continent; Europe’s glitterati adored him.
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Nardi is a Venetian jeweler famous for his blackmoor or "Moretti" brooches. Carved from ebony or sardonyx, these brooches depict the head and shoulders of a turbaned “Moorish” male—the intended reference is often to Othello, the Moor of Venice, or to the valiant, warlike Hannibal. They are typically gem encrusted and constructed with precious metals. The brooches were originally Venetian souvenirs. In the late 1920’s and early 1930’s, they became wildly popular. Nardi’s founder Giulio Nardi, who first began producing blackamoors in the early twenties, is known as a master craftsman of them.
Though the firm carried, and still carries, more than just blackamoors, its fame is largely a result of its founder’s ebony creations. |
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(1860 - 1914)
Italian goldsmith known for work in the tradition of Castellani. Carlo Giuliano’s ties to Castellani are highly disputed. Some jewellery historians claim that Giuliano apprenticed with the firm and that he “accompanied Alessandro Castellini to London [in 1862] with the intention of managing the latter’s firm at 13 Frith Street.”
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(1814 - 1930) Italian jeweller initiating the archaeological revival movement in the mid-nineteenth century. Castellani’s founder, Fortunato Pio Castellani, opened up shop in Rome in 1814. In 1826, he met his lifelong friend and collaborator Michaelango Caetani at a lecture where Castellani was speaking about how to recreate the look of ancient gold. According to jewellery historians, Caetani “gave Fortunato Pio the idea to imitate and seek inspiration from Ancient jewellers.”
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(1919 - present) Italian firm famous for its textural gold jewellery and exquisite silver objects. According to family history, the Buccellati's first foray into the jewellery trade was in the mid-eighteenth century when Contardo Buccellati worked as a goldsmith in Milan.
In 1903, Mario Buccellati revived the family tradition, apprenticing at Milan’s prestigious Beltrami & Beltrami.
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