The Doris Duke Jewelry Collection
Transcription
The Doris Duke Jewelry Collection
Gems from the East and West The Doris Duke Jewelry Collection Janet Zapata Ulysses Dietz Zette Emmons Gems from the East and West The Doris Duke Jewelry Collection Foreword When the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation was launched in 1996, we knew very little about Doris Duke’s life and her work. Now, seven years later, we have come to better understand the multiple dimensions of Doris Duke as a generous philanthropist, talented collector, and an independent woman with diverse interests and an adventurous spirit. This catalog is the third book that the foundation has published about Doris Duke’s collections. Doris Duke’s Shangri La, published in 2002, examines her Islamic art collection and Honolulu home; Doris Duke: The Southeast Asian Art Collection, published in 2003, documents the diverse objects she collected for a Thai Village Project that she envisioned building in Hawaii but was never able to complete; and now we are pleased to offer Gems of the East and West: The Doris Duke Jewelry Collection, which catalogs the most personal of her collections. Doris Duke’s jewelry offers us a rare glimpse into the evolution of her tastes and interests. This catalog contrasts her increasingly refined and unconventional selection of jewels against the fashions of her time and the social conventions of the wealthy. It also demonstrates a signature trait of Doris Duke as a collector that is evident in her other collections and at her estates: she became personally involved in her acquisitions and projects, whether by redesigning outdated jewelry, helping to restore works of art, or designing marble floor panels for her home in Hawaii. Upon a closer examination of each of her collections, we have gained a more nuanced understanding of Doris Duke, including her personal aesthetic, discerning eye, and appreciation for unusual and exotic works of art. We also have gained insight into her unique and complex vision as a philanthropist. Although she led an intensely private life, she opened the door to her life’s work when she died, leaving the majority of her wealth, estates, and collections to the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation to benefit the public and to offer people an opportunity to learn about the cultures and the art that she devoted a lifetime to exploring and acquiring. In the near future, selected pieces from Doris Duke’s jewelry collection will be auctioned, as well as other personal effects that were left to the foundation. Proceeds from the auction will support the work of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. We hope that this publication will help illuminate the distinctive style, aesthetic standards, and artistic vision that Doris Duke applied to so many aspects of her life. It has been a labor of love for several staff members at the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation— including Patrick Lerch, Olga Garay, Elizabeth Steinberg, and Kim Bedetti. The foundation’s trustees have also been engaged in this project, especially Marion Oates Charles, who recognized from the beginning that Doris Duke’s jewelry was a valuable asset not only in terms of its precious stones and stellar craftsmanship, but also because it sheds light on the life and times of a remarkable woman. The Newport Restoration Foundation has been a key partner for us in this endeavor—particularly Pieter N. Roos and A. Bruce MacLeish, who has worked tirelessly to organize the first exhibition of Doris Duke’s jewelry and played a key role in the production of this catalog. In addition, we would like to thank Ulysses Dietz, Janet Zapata, and Zette Emmons, whose work as the guest curators for the jewelry exhibition has yielded a valuable interpretive source of information about Doris Duke’s jewelry, style and life. Finally, we are especially pleased that the first exhibition of Doris Duke’s jewelry will be unveiled at the J. Carter Brown Galleries at Rough Point, which was Doris Duke’s home in Newport, Rhode Island. Carter Brown was appointed to the board of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation when it was first established, and he continued to serve on our board until he died in 2002. His broad experience and expertise on innumerable subjects—especially the arts—were an invaluable resource for the foundation. Joan E. Spero, President, Doris Duke Charitable Foundation APRIL 2003 FOREWORD The exhibition of Doris Duke’s jewelry collection at Rough Point marks a turning point in the operation of this historic site by the Newport Restoration Foundation. The exhibition, as others that will follow it, will engage the public in new ways by highlighting tangible aspects of Doris Duke’s interests throughout her life. Her jewelry obviously has not been available for public scrutiny until this time. Nor has the NRF had the occasion or the space to offer the public an intense experience with works of art of this scale surrounded by so much didactic information. The new J. Carter Brown Galleries at Rough Point have enabled the installation of Doris Duke’s jewelry in a delicate and intimate fashion. The inauguration of these galleries with this exhibition, therefore, helps to launch a new public amenity on site, and a place from which traveling exhibitions can be spawned that will offer public delight at other institutions over time. It is also anticipated that exhibitions may be brought to Rough Point that will extend the mission of the NRF in new ways. For this we owe the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation a debt of gratitude. It is through its vision and understanding that these galleries and therefore this exhibition are possible. These galleries are dedicated by the Trustees of the Newport Restoration Foundation to J. Carter Brown in gratitude for his great support and influence on our work. He was a Trustee of both the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and of the Newport Restoration Foundation. In this service, he helped guide these related foundations during their early years. During his distinguished career in the museum world, Carter Brown was a passionate gatherer of works of art of the highest quality in exhibitions that extended knowledge and understanding of the history of culture. He wished to share the pleasure of his own curiosity with others. He also recognized the necessity of engaging people with dynamic ideas portrayed through the comparison of artifacts in beautiful settings. How much he would have appreciated this inaugural exhibition in these galleries for which his efforts had created the groundwork. I congratulate NRF Executive Director Pieter N. Roos and the NRF staff for creating them and this exhibition. To feature Doris Duke’s jewelry as if it were one of her passionate collecting efforts is, however, to give truth to a myth. While she certainly acquired jewelry of spectacular quality during her lifetime, according to people who knew her, Miss Duke’s jewelry became an “unintentional collection” based on inheritance as well as on her own personal taste. From her grandmother, Florine Holt, and her mother, Nanaline Duke, she acquired jewelry of classical restraint, to which she added items of more dramatic presence, working with designers of her own time. Built on the influence of her forebearers, her taste was expanded by her travels and contact with people whose knowledge of fine things she admired. Doris Duke’s own passion for the arts of India and Southeast Asia directed her toward acquiring this collection of jewelry. While her jewelry was an amenity beautifying her life, it was but just one of the masses of wonderful objects flowing through her experience that defined her. As opposed to her directed and discreet collections, or her theme-related houses in which she invested significant amounts of focus and time, Doris Duke’s jewelry collection consisted of a more broad-based process of selection. In this respect, her jewelry can give us more of an insight about her own history and character than her other holdings. Her jewelry collection is thus testimony to several generations of response to conspicuous opportunities sifted through her hands. The works that are included in this exhibition summarize her broad cultural interests and her passion for refinement. We are fortunate that she has left these glittering treasures together for us to appreciate. They—and Miss Duke through her legacy at Rough Point—can teach us much about collecting and about the cultures from which her objects have emanated. We must not stop remembering the larger legacies she left to support the maintenance of historic houses and the support of works of art yet to be created. Roger Mandle, President, Rhode Island School of Design and Trustee, Newport Restoration Foundation Acknowledgements The coordinators of the catalog project would like to thank the Board of Trustees of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation for making the jewelry collection available for exhibition and research: the late J. Carter Brown, Mrs. Marion Oates Charles, James F. Gill, Harry B. Demopoulos, Anthony S. Fauci, Nannerl O. Keohane, John J. Mack, and John H. T. Wilson. Our gratitude is also extended to the staff of the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation for their practical assistance in developing the concepts for the exhibition and catalog and for bringing both to fruition, especially Joan E. Spero, president, Olga M. Garay, program director for the arts, Patrick Lerch, director of properties, Elizabeth Steinberg, archivist, and Kim Bedetti, archival assistant. Thank you also to Owen Moore, collections manager, and Sharon Littlefield, curator, Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art, and Timothy Pyatt, university archivist at Duke University. We especially thank Newport Restoration Foundation Executive Director Pieter N. Roos for the overall supervision of the catalog and Rough Point Assistant Curator Michele K. Musto for research and image coordination. We are especially thankful to our colleague, Zette Emmons, whose understanding of and experience with Indian jewelry helped complete the story of this remarkable collection. We also recognize the enthusiastic support of Mary Sue Price, Director of The Newark Museum, and Ward L. E. Mintz, Deputy Director for Programs and Collections at The Newark Museum, as this project got underway. As we compiled background material for this project, we were generously assisted by many individuals from large and small jewelry houses, who contributed not only information about their pieces but also provided period photographs and original art work. For this, we owe special thanks to Bonnie Selfe, Cartier, Inc., New York; Pascale Milhaud and Monique Gay, Cartier S. A., Geneva; Ward Landrigan and Cyd Hamby, Verdura, Inc., New York; Stanley Silberstein, David Webb, Inc., New York; and Roshi Ameri, Seaman Schepps, New York. We also want to thank Stephen Lash, Sheri Farber, Simon Teakle,Veridiana Pontes-Ring and Daphne Lingon at Christie’s, New York, for their assistance with various aspects of the collection. The history of many early pieces was enhanced by the research of Linda McCurdy, Elizabeth B. Dunn, Janie C. Morris, Eleanor Mills and Ian Lekus of the Duke University Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library. Photographs of the Duke family were supplied by Lisa Dubisz, Motion Picture and Television Photo Archive Image Vault; Anthony Sullivan, Hulton Archive, Getty Images; Sue Daly, Sotheby’s, London; George Hurrell, Jr.; and Cupie and Digi Singh. We are indebted to Ricardo Zapata for his editorial assistance toward melding the introduction into a coherent whole, and to Patty MacLeish for her unerring editorial eye in picking out problems we could no longer see. Lastly, we thank photographers Richard and Elizabeth Walker and designer Darcy Magratten whose talents truly brought the beauty of this collection to these pages. Ulysses Dietz, The Newark Museum A. Bruce MacLeish, Newport Restoration Foundation Janet Zapata, Jewelry Historian Gems from the East and West The Doris Duke Jewelry Collection Janet Zapata Ulysses Dietz Zette Emmons Published by: Doris Duke Charitable Foundation 650 Fifth Avenue, 19th floor New York, New York 10019 Tel: (212) 974-7000 www.ddcf.org In association with: Newport Restoration Foundation 51 Touro Street Newport, Rhode Island 02840 Tel: (401) 849 -7300 www.newportrestoration.org Copyright 2003 by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation All rights reserved ISBN 0 – 9725588-1- 0 9000 Library of Congress 2003104496 Cover photo: Diamond and pearl festoon necklace (Fig. 15) Cover photograph, photograph by David Franzen (p.6 ), photograph by Shuzo Uemoto (p.7), photographs pages 4, 5, 27, 33, 34, 45, 55, 75, 95, and the photographs of figures 1 through 296 copyright Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. Illustrations and photographs from the following collections are used with permission: Newport Restoration Foundation, Newport, Rhode Island; Sotheby’s London; Duke University Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library; Motion Picture Television Photo Archive Image Vault; George Hurrell; Cupie and Digi Singh; Houghton Archive care of Getty Images. Drawings from Verdura, Inc.; David Webb, Inc.; Cartier, Inc. Photography: Richard and Elizabeth Walker Design: Darcy Magratten Printing: Meridian Printing Curators’ PREFACE Doris Duke was a remarkable woman. She was a tireless traveler, a prodigious builder and renovator of houses, and an insatiable collector. While her collections of Asian and Islamic art are relatively well known across the country, one of her most fascinating collections is the one that was known only to her family and friends and, even then, only in bits and pieces— her jewelry. In fact, Miss Duke did not consider it a collection at all: it was just her personal jewelry, ranging from antique heirloom pieces from her grandmother to the latest fashionable examples of the 1960s crafted by society jewelers such as David Webb, Inc. The one facet of her jewelry that Miss Duke might have thought of as a collection was the Indian jewelry, which she began to acquire on her wedding trip in 1935 and continued to add to throughout most of her life. However, as is often the case with jewelry, Miss Duke saw this collection as something without scholarly or art-historical interest. It was something that either she liked and wore or that had intimate, personal meaning from important moments in her life. Part of Miss Duke’s feeling about her jewelry would have derived from the fact that, until the past fifteen years or so, few American museums had any interest in the history of jewelry. Even fewer had done any scholarly work on the jewelry they did own, unless it came from the Renaissance or antiquity. Hence, she had no way of knowing that her wonderful collection of jewels—hundreds of objects in a myriad of styles and materials—could indeed tell a story. As we look at it today, Doris Duke’s 399-piece jewelry collection not only tells the story of her life, but it also tells a story of America in the latter part of the nineteenth and most of the twentieth centuries. Far from having no art-historical interest, it offers us insights into changing taste from the 1850s to the end of the twentieth century, as well as shedding light on the complex social customs of the Indian subcontinent in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Even in the fragments of jewels—components from original pieces refashioned into more modern pieces—there is a story of ceaseless change and restless energy. It is our privilege to provide an account of the story of Doris Duke’s least known collection as an introduction to the exhibition of 110 pieces selected from it. This exhibition, which is the first and only time this diverse group of jewels will be seen together, is organized into the five following groupings: inherited pieces, jewelry from Nanaline Duke, Miss Duke’s early Western jewelry, her later Western jewelry, and her Eastern jewelry. For each section, this catalog includes a brief contextual introduction followed by photographs and descriptive information, including some original design drawings, photographs, and other documentation, about each of the exhibited pieces. At the front of the catalog, two essays provide more detailed background material that will help foster an understanding of and appreciation for Doris Duke’s lifetime pursuit of beauty. Janet Zapata Ulysses Dietz Zette Emmons 1 Duke homestead, Durham, North Carolina The Duke Family The flash of light off the facets of a diamond is designed to catch our eye. It is brilliance and sparkle, but there is more. The ice is only the tip of the berg in a creation that is a combination of design, craftsmanship, aesthetic detail, geology, and a certain amount of passion. There is history too. Whether she was at age twenty-five or seventy-five, Doris Duke consistently devoted painstaking attention to her homes and collections. She was a woman of passions, and her outlook on life was both grand and intimate. Only now after her death are her complexity and her many interests becoming evident to those who lived outside her private circle. She was a collector with an educated and perceptive eye, but her interests went deeper than that. She had a passion for all things aesthetic, whether it was Islamic art, historic preservation, music and dance, or the natural environment around us. She also had a particular gift from her father in the form of financial resources to pursue these many interests. The jewelry of Doris Duke is fascinating. Because of the very personal nature of jewelry, it offers us an intimate insight into her interests and her history. Throughout her adult life, Doris Duke had a fascination for art and decorative arts from the Middle and Far East, and a large part of the jewelry collection reflects this lifelong interest. The jewelry also gives us a rare glimpse into the personal history of the Duke family beyond what can be gleaned from the other Duke collections. Within its gold, gemstones, and craftsmanship are captured the personal character of one hundred years of this family that rode the crest of American wealth. The foundation of the Duke family’s prominence was laid in the years shortly after the Civil War when Washington Duke, Doris Duke’s grandfather, built a successful regional business in tobacco growing and processing. His sons, Benjamin and James Buchanan Duke, through good salesmanship, clever use of technology, and a goodly measure of business acumen, built this into an empire that became the American Tobacco Company, one of the earliest and most powerful monopolies of its day. Upon this fortune James B. 2 “Buck” Duke built yet another, based on electricity, when he founded Duke Power and lit up the Piedmont of the Carolinas. Although the Duke tobacco business and Duke Power were based in North Carolina, James B. Duke found it necessary to establish offices in New York, the economic capitol of the United States. It was from these offices that he transacted most of his business. He was at heart a product of the southern countryside, not the big city, but his greatest love was building and maintaining his business empire. Living and working in New York was for him an unfortunate side effect of his success, and for a long period of his life, he was truly married to his work. He married in 1904, but the union did not last long. In 1907, he married a beautiful and recently widowed native Doris Duke and her father, James Buchanan Duke of Macon, Nanaline Holt Inman. For Nanaline, New York was a great and welcome adventure. Far more socially aspiring than her husband, she was only too happy to leave her native Georgia behind. It was with Nanaline that James B. Duke embarked on his great domestic building program. At the time, he owned houses in Durham, North Carolina, New York City, and Hillsborough, New Jersey. Construction of his estate in New Jersey was already well underway at the time of his second marriage, but for his new wife he determined to add a palatial house overlooking its 2,700 rolling acres of forests, fields, and ponds, most of which he had created himself. He also sold his house in New York and replaced it with a substantial new residence on the corner of Fifth Avenue and 78th Street. Both of these structures were designed by the renowned architect, Horace Trumbauer, in a French palatial style that was in keeping with the grand houses of their social peers. November 22, 1912 saw the entrance into the world of James B. and Nanaline’s first and only child, Doris. She was born into one of the wealthiest families in America and a rarefied atmosphere of privilege. From the first, Doris was the darling of her father, a man already in his fifties. He offered her the best that he could provide, but he also conveyed to her much of his own philosophy and sensibilities. Throughout her life, she enjoyed the large estate that her father had left her, but she was at the same time careful never to fritter away money, as so many other children of fortune had. 3 Doris Duke and Aletta Morris at Bailey’s Beach, summer 1924 An outing to Rough Point with friends in the mid 1950s 4 Nanaline was never fond of the New Jersey estate, and ultimately the new house there was never completed, although plans were drawn and a foundation was built. What Nanaline had set her sights upon instead was the more prestigious social mecca of Newport. After summering there from 1915 through 1921, the Dukes finally purchased the former home of Frederick Vanderbilt at Rough Point. Set on nine acres of beautiful waterfront property, it was one of the finest building sites that Newport had to offer. Once again, architect Horace Trumbauer stepped in, this time to alter an existing structure rather than to build anew. The resulting summer home, finished in 1924, was clearly an expression of Nanaline’s taste and desires. James B. Duke saw only two summers there before he died on October 10, 1925. Just twelve at the time, Doris was devastated by his death. Nanaline and her daughter were left with each other at the start of Doris’s teenage years. Doris grew up in many places, but spent most of her time in New York, where she received private tutoring. She adored Duke Farms near Hillsborough, New Jersey. The estate was truly a creation of her father, and she associated it with him. It was certainly a touchstone through her life and was the house that she identified as her home and principal residence. Her business affairs and personal finances were managed through its offices, and it was where all of her family photographs were kept. At all of her houses one can find evidence of her pursuits, but it is at Duke Farms that one finds them in abundance. Playing the piano was an obsession for her. In Newport and Honolulu one finds pianos, but at Duke Farms there are six. Through the rest of her youth, Doris Duke spent her summers at Rough Point. The surviving diary of her close childhood friend, Aletta Morris, gives a good picture of her activities. As children the girls were very close, and Aletta’s diary records in detail the round of activities that included tennis, various outings, and games, as well as lengthy visits to Bailey’s Beach, the private beach of which both families were members. One suspects that Doris Duke chafed at the bonds that held young women captive in the 1920s and 1930s. She felt the urge to travel and explore cultures and lifestyles different from those within which she had been raised. In 1935, at the age of twenty-two, she married James Cromwell, and the two embarked on a honeymoon tour of the world. She traveled to Eastern destinations for the first time, visiting such countries as Egypt, India, Thailand, and China. These travels had a profound effect on the rest of her life for they spurred her interest in Asia and the Islamic world, an interest which expressed itself subsequently through Doris Duke’s perpetual travels and her Doris Duke and James Cromwell in India passion for collecting. Though she collected broadly on her honeymoon, in time Doris Duke focused her energy on building two particular collections: one of Southeast Asian art and the other of arts from the Islamic world. It was during her honeymoon that she also began collecting jewelry from these cultures. In her lifetime, Doris Duke was unable to identify a locale she felt would be suitable to house her Southeast Asian art collection, and, as a result, much of the collection has recently been donated to the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore and the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco. In contrast, Doris Duke envisioned her Islamic art collection as an integral part of the only home she ever built for herself, Shangri La, in Honolulu, Hawaii, where the collection remains to this day. The origins of Shangri La as a home also stem from Doris Duke’s honeymoon. The final stop on their world tour, Honolulu, proved to be a hit with the newlyweds. They extended their planned stay of two weeks to nearly four months, purchased property in the following year, and began building the estate soon after. Likely influenced by recent travels, the couple decided to design Shangri La with an eye towards the forms and functions seen in Islamic architecture and to furnish the home with examples of Islamic art. To some, the synthesis of a Hawaiian locale and Islamic art at an estate called Shangri La may seem peculiar, but it posed no dilemmas for Doris Duke. She was drawn to the aesthetics of Islamic art and loved the outdoor lifestyle of Hawaii, so pairing the two in what was to be a very private retreat was natural. Participating in the designing and building of the estate afforded Doris Duke with what was probably her first real opportunity for creative expression on a grand scale. She was intimately involved in every decision from landscaping to the number of rooms, from materials used in the building to the placement of her collection around her home. The estate was substantially complete by 1939, but, in a sense, Doris Duke’s work at Shangri La had only just begun. She initiated and monitored several major renovations, both conceptually and physically, in every decade of her life. 5 Playhouse at Shangri La Ocean front of Rough Point A woman of contrasts, she reveled in the sweeping, tremendous ocean views from her homes in Newport and Honolulu, swimming often in both the warm Pacific and chilly Atlantic. But she was just as attentive to the details of a lovely piece of jewelry or the appearance of a particular orchid. Sometimes the refinement of Newport society called to her, sometimes the casual beach life of Hawaii. She was fascinated by the heritage of Newport, but also by distant cultures in the East. As Nanaline Duke aged, she eventually stopped using her houses in Newport and New York, and she and her daughter pondered what should be done with them. In 1958 the house at One East 78th Street was donated to New York University for its Institute of Fine Arts, a purpose that it fulfills to this day. Rough Point’s fate was less certain. An initial attempt was made to donate it to Newport Hospital, but the offer met with little interest. Most of Newport’s Gilded Age houses were considered to be white elephants at the time, and Rough Point apparently fell into that category as far as the trustees of the hospital were concerned. At some point, Doris Duke changed her mind about discarding the house, although sadly there is little evidence for how or why her affections for the property grew. What is clear is that during the last years of the 1950s, she began to purchase works of art for the house. Evidence from this period indicates that the house was nearly empty, a blank canvas. Tapestries, a few pieces of furniture, and antique wallpaper started the redecorating campaign. Eventually much of the art and furniture from the New York house also found its way to Newport, but throughout the next thirty years, she continued to fine-tune the house and its appearance. She had an extraordinary aesthete’s eye and a gift for assembling ostensibly uncoordinated items into an attractive and dynamic pattern. Over time the house became one of her favorites, and towards the end of her life she spent as much time in it as she spent in any of her houses. Rough Point became a focus for collections of European fine and decorative arts, just as Shangri La had been a focus for her superb Islamic art. Although Doris Duke assembled many interesting collections over the course of her life, no other house became a center of such focused collecting activity as did these two residences. 6 Pierced-work Ming wine jar in Rough Point collection Pair of eighteenth-century doors from Turkey at Shangri La An intrinsic part of Doris Duke’s eye as a collector was her interest in using her own hands in the pursuit of craftsmanship, and her ceramics are an outstanding example. Careless cleaning and the hazards of everyday life took their toll on the huge number of ceramics that furnished every house. Feeling a keen interest not only in the objects themselves but also in their care, she received tutoring from a ceramics conservator and took great pride in repairing and restoring broken items great and small. In every house she kept a collection of ceramic conservation supplies. She also hired Philip Mello, a skilled, local Newport woodworker and carver, to care for her extensive collections of furniture. He worked not only with the furniture at Rough Point but for the other residences as well. Most of his work was carried out in a shop on the third floor at Rough Point, where Doris Duke was a frequent visitor to see what activity he was pursuing. However, she was also a participant, sometimes working for two or three weeks on a single, intricate project. This work was not restricted to Rough Point; she was also actively engaged in caring for the collection at Shangri La, including cleaning, repairing, and assisting restorers. Jin deSilva, a longtime resident and employee in Hawaii, recalls that she climbed up on scaffolding to work on tile panels and that she and her staff would sit around the patio working on the collections in an assembly-line manner. Such participation always produces a greater appreciation for craftsmanship and was certainly a factor in choosing the art and jewelry that she acquired. The jewelry is but one of many collections that included such diverse tastes as ancient bronzes and English portraiture, but the woman who kept and assembled this jewelry had a depth and a history that are part and parcel of the collection itself. Ultimately, Doris Duke’s legacy is the charitable expression of her many passions, through agencies such as the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, the Newport Restoration Foundation, the Duke Farms Foundation and the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art. Jazz, dance, the natural environment, and the many beautiful things that caught her wellpracticed eye represent her bequests to the public, but the intimacy of this outstanding collection adds a unique and intriguing facet to the story. Pieter N. Roos, Executive Director, Newport Restoration Foundation Sharon Littlefield, Curator, Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art 7 The doris Duke jewelry collection Until not too long ago, jewelry was associated with aristocracy and power. Only nobles needed gold and gemstones, and indeed they bedecked themselves with precious jewels in order to remind themselves and their vassals just how important they were. Jewelry, because it was inherently precious, was synonymous with wealth, and wealth was intimately associated with power. Eventually, as ordinary people began to prosper, they desired the trappings of power and wealth. In colonial America, a small but steady demand for gold jewelry made by local craftsmen grew until, by the beginning of the 1800s, it warranted the start of a small jewelry “factory” by Epaphras Hinsdale in a modest New Jersey farm town called Newark.1 By the middle of the nineteenth century, not only was there a well-established jewelry industry in this country—and not just in Newark but in every good-sized city in the nation—but there was also a vast middle-class market for the latest fashions of solid gold jewelry from Europe. Jewelry, once the province of the mighty, had become a desirable commodity for the rising bourgeoisie; once a luxury only for the very rich, it had become a necessity for the average American. Women had to have pearl necklaces and gold bracelets and diamond rings. Men had to have gold collar buttons and sleeve buttons and tie pins, as well as the requisite gold watch and chain with accoutrements such as seals and pocketknives. To cope with this growing demand, Newark factories employed hundreds of men, women, and children, working six days a week, to make solid gold jewelry.2 It was in this world of “jewelry as necessity” that Doris Duke’s maternal grandmother, Florine Russell Holt, was born and raised and married Thaddeus Holt, Jr., who came from a prosperous Macon, Georgia, family. The Holt family suffered financial ruin, probably in the panic of 1883, and Thaddeus later died at sea, leaving his widow and teenage daughter Nanaline to fend for themselves in genteel poverty. However, in the years before the hard times, Thaddeus had purchased for his wife the kind of elegant haute bourgeoisie jewelry that women of her class had come to expect. The carved coral jewelry that Doris Duke owned (Figs. 8, 9 ) most certainly came from her grandmother Holt and dated to the years shortly after the Civil War when the Holts were still prosperous.3 Such jewelry, invariably of a rich orange-pink coral mounted on yellow gold and naturalistically carved with leaves, roses, and other plant motifs, was standard fare for the genteel lady in the middle decades of the nineteenth century. The coral was carved in Italy and shipped to the United States where it was retailed throughout the country. Every aspect of the decorative arts of this period was influenced by French taste, from imported porcelains to the carved rosewood parlor furniture made famous in the American South by New York manufacturers such as John Henry Belter and Joseph W. Meeks. Florine Holt’s coral jewelry with its intricate carvings bears a lineage to these designs. Of special interest is the charming and beautifully crafted demi-parure of a brooch and earrings in the form of grape clusters (Fig. 8 ). The finely worked filigreed leaves and the coral grapes represent the plant motif of the typical midVictorian American home. The original presentation case for the set has survived, showing 8 that the brooch-and-earring demi-parure was the most common form for jewelry wearing in the period. This was not casual jewelry by any means. Florine Holt would have worn this group of coral jewelry with great pride and only on special occasions. The word genteel seems strangely archaic today, but gentility was the yardstick by which all Americans measured themselves and their peers in nineteenth-century America. To be genteel, one did not need to be rich, although gentility implied a certain financial comfort and that comfort demanded jewelry as part of the necessary accoutrement. For more casual, daily wear, Florine Holt might have worn the carved cameo earrings and brooch encircled with half pearls (Fig. 11). Mimicking the carved cameos and intaglios of Roman antiquity, such jewelry was commonplace in Europe by the 1820s and spread throughout the American middle-class market in the 1860s, fueled by the popularity of the French néo-grec or “new Greek” style of Napoleon III and Empress Eugénie. A more glamorous and costly example of this fashion is the pair of gold woven-chain bracelets in the Etruscan style, both of which are engraved Holt (Fig. 12 ). Until the late-nineteenth century, bracelets were commonly worn in pairs, either as rigid bangles or as link bracelets. These bracelets are probably American and very likely were made in Newark, New Jersey, by the firm of W. C. Edge & Sons. William Edge was an English emigrant, who, by introducing machinery into what was formerly a hand-process, managed to lower the cost of woven gold, “foxtail” chains from one dollar to two cents per foot.4 These bracelets seem to take full advantage of the new chain-making technology of the 1880s and, thus, might date to the years after Thaddeus Holt’s impoverishment and death. In that case, perhaps they were a gift to Florine Holt from her daughter, Nanaline, who had regained prosperity through her marriage to William Inman. Diamonds were very rare in American jewelry before they were discovered in South Africa in the late 1860s. From that time on, diamonds became—for the first time in human history—accessible to the middle class. The small diamond set in the center of Florine Holt’s gold watch from the 1890s (Fig. 10) is typical of the early use of such gems in more bourgeois jewels.5 This watch also exemplifies the “gendering” of jewelry in the nineteenth century. Women’s watches became smaller and more ornately decorated, while men’s watches remained larger and plainer. To Nanaline Duke, and then to her daughter Doris, this small collection of heirloom jewels must have evoked poignant memories of a determined, strong-willed woman who clung to her genteel status through long years of hardship, to finally triumph in the meteoric rise of her only surviving child to the pinnacle of the Gilded Age society. However, another small group of modest jewels owned by Doris Duke tells another, even more poignant tale. Among all the opulent jewels owned by Nanaline and Doris Duke, there is a small group of cuff links—set with simple cabochons of amethyst, moonstone, and turquoise. With them is a simple, gold pocketknife meant to be worn on a watch chain, engraved “J.B.D.” (Fig. 4). These are the only remaining examples of James Buchanan Duke’s own jewelry. To Doris Duke, these must have been talismans of the doting father who died when she was twelve years old. Aside from a gold watch chain, a pocket watch, and a signet ring, 9 he may not have owned much more jewelry than this.6 Men, even major industrialists of the Gilded Age, were not supposed to wear much jewelry. Even for the richest men, strict standards of good taste were imposed by social convention, at least for men who cared.7 James B. Duke bought jewelry at Tiffany & Co. in New York and Cartier in Paris, the same kind of elegant, yet simple, cuff links for daily wear that any other American businessman in any American city might have owned. Indeed, two of his sets of cuff links (Figs. 5, 6 ) were made by Carrington & Co., a Newark firm that produced elegant men’s jewelry for high-end retailers all across the nation, including both Cartier and Tiffany. Although known for his flamboyant personality, he was never flashy in his personal dress, preferring, as we shall see, to dress his wife in glittering gems. A single, diminutive gold bangle, inscribed “MM to DD” was given to Doris Duke as a toddler (Fig. 3). It is not known who made the presentation, perhaps a godmother. The dents on it suggest long wear by an active little girl. Such symbolic, simple jewels were given to babies during the nineteenth century. A gift of a gold bracelet symbolized in its material the preciousness of the recipient. In spite of high infant mortality in the nineteenth century, children were seen as new beginnings, and the tradition of baby gifts of silver or gold became deeply engrained by the early-twentieth century. It is in that light that we can see the delicate, little, pearl-encrusted gold locket, given to Doris Duke when she was eleven years old—possibly the last gift of jewelry her father gave her (Fig. 2). It is the kind of jewelry that any middle-class father might have bought his little girl as she entered adolescence. But more than that, it is the kind of jewelry that was seen as appropriate for an eleven-year-old girl. The fact that Doris Duke was worth many millions did not make any difference. Pearls symbolized purity, so they were what young girls wore—anything more would have been unseemly. Typically, this locket, plus a seed-pearl barrette and matching “handy pins” (Fig. 1) used for cuffs and collars, would comprise an entire ensemble of the kind that Doris Duke would have worn exclusively until she was in her teens. Two final heirloom jewels symbolize the Gilded Age in a very literal way, one Doris Duke inherited from her mother, the other from her mother-in-law. Neither of these pieces were in fashion by the time she came of age, and so she probably kept them as symbols of powerful society women at the height of their social power. By the turn of the twentieth century, mesh bags, also known as chain purses or chatelaine purses, were popular at all economic levels. Base metal chain bags were favored fashion accessories through the 1920s, and silver-plated mesh bags sold for as little as ten dollars in most department stores. Sterling silver bags were more costly but still common enough for middle-class women. Solid gold bags, made in Europe as well as in America, were at the upper end of the market. A simple fourteen-karat gold, mesh bag, which sold for about five hundred dollars in the early 1900s, was considered appropriate for daytime use. Adding diamonds increased the dollar value.8 Nanaline Duke’s mesh bag, its filigreed frame glittering with substantial diamonds (Fig. 13), and used as an evening accessory in the early years of her marriage, would have been a standard accoutrement for women of her class. By the late 1920s, she had acquired an even more glamorous, if more discreet, evening bag (Fig. 23). 10 Nanaline Duke’s good friend and social peer, Philadelphia grande dame Eva Cromwell Stotesbury, owned a vanity case that functioned much like the above-mentioned purse. This vanity case of engraved green gold is set with sapphires and diamonds and dates from the years around World War I (Fig. 14). Like Nanaline’s mesh bag, this opulent object was intended for evening use but was less bulky and was carried suspended from a chatelaine pin hooked to a belt or waistband. With its superb Louis XVI engraving, it evokes the lavish world of the belle époque, combining modern convenience with the trappings of aristocracy. Because it bears Doris Duke Cromwell’s monogram as well as Eva Stotesbury’s own name and address engraved on the frame, it was, most likely, given to Doris Duke around the time she married Eva Stotesbury’s son, James Cromwell, in 1935.9 Two elegant pendant watches show a shift in Nanaline Duke’s jewelry style from the late-nineteenth century to the early-twentieth century. The earlier watch (Fig. 18 ), made by Longines, retains its original fleur-de-lis chatelaine pin. A bright bleu celeste enamel contrasts with the rich rococo goldwork of the case, which is further ornamented with a central motif studded with small, rose-cut diamonds. Nanaline probably acquired this watch in the 1890s when she was still Mrs. William Inman. The later watch, by Tiffany & Co. (Fig. 19 ), demonstrates the altogether more subtle, but still very French, taste of Mrs. James B. Duke. The reticulated, knife-edge border of tiny diamonds contrasts with the brilliant green of the guilloché and transparent enamel border around the dial, which is further enriched with a blue swag-patterned guilloché and transparent enamel case centered with a cabochon emerald. As compared with the haute bourgeoisie quality of the Longines watch, the later Tiffany watch evokes self-consciously, upper-class refinement and subtlety; it represents Tiffany imitating Cartier imitating Fabergé. Compared with Florine Holt’s gold pendant watch from a generation before (Fig. 10), it gives mute witness to how far Nanaline Holt’s star had risen. Doris Duke inherited all Nanaline’s jewelry after her death in 1962. Although Doris Duke frequently modified her jewels over time (a habit she apparently learned from her mother), one of her mother’s greatest jewels survived intact, probably because it was so strikingly beautiful and well made. Nothing better exemplifies Nanaline Holt Inman’s new role as the wife of James B. Duke than the diamond festoon necklace Mr. Duke bought his bride at Cartier in Paris in 1908 (Fig. 15).10 Festoon necklaces were popular in the earlytwentieth century, and nice examples in gold with pearls or amethysts could be purchased by middle-class women for as little as thirty dollars.11 Nanaline Duke’s festoon of diamonds and platinum was perhaps among the most opulent of its time in America. Cartier’s Paris shop charged James B. Duke fr 18,500 for it, after he provided them with most of the large diamonds.12 The icy-white color scheme of the necklace was the fashion for formal jewels in this period, when platinum had finally come to dominate diamond jewelry as the technology to work with this very hard metal was perfected. The classical symmetry and soft draping of the chains of diamonds embodied the luxurious style of the time, harking back to the designs of eighteenth-century European nobility. It epitomizes the belle époque period with its swags, decorated with four-petaled flowers, joined at the center by a vertical design ending with a pendant suspended from a natural pearl whose color softens the 11 stark whiteness of the diamonds. The large pearl mounted just above the pear-shaped diamond pendant might seem odd but, at the time, pearls of large size were as valuable as diamonds. Nanaline Duke would continue to combine pearls and diamonds throughout her jewelry-buying life. The next major example of this in the collection, showing a significant style shift, is an art deco diadem set with two large diamonds and a large oriental pearl, which either she or James B. Duke bought at Cartier in 1924 for $23,000 (Fig. 16 ). Mikimoto’s pearl farming process, first perfected in 1905, had not yet devalued natural Asian pearls, and it was logical for Nanaline to want to showcase this one. The geometric design of this bandeauform tiara reflects Eastern European folk design and shows the continued influence of the Russian Imperial Court taste, over a decade after its demise. The more hard-edged look of this piece stands in strong contrast to the softer opulence of the earlier necklace. A Cartier bracelet Nanaline Duke acquired a few years later (Fig. 17), set with magnificent diamonds, is a testament to superb design. Louis Cartier continually searched for new sources of inspiration for his jewelry designs. When the rectilinear style of Doris Duke with an unidentified gentleman. She is wearing the art deco period became popular, he turned the Verdura pink topaz and diamond ear clips (Fig. 49). to the design potential of ancient temples and pagodas, especially to such elements as columns and arches on the Taj Mahal and the Pantheon, as well as abstract patterns formed by the stepped outlines found on ancient structures such as Babylonian ziggurats or Mayan temples. The architectonic possibilities of these shapes conformed to the emerging new style and offered a tableau for the new diamond cuts, including the baguette cut that Cartier introduced in 1912. This bracelet bears witness to their fine design. One marquisecut and four pear-shaped diamonds counterbalance the angularity of the baguette-cut diamonds and serve the double function of softening the overall appearance while highlighting the striking effect of the columnlike central links. This design is dictated by the shape of the diamonds in much the same way that jewelry from the 1950s was conceived with no visible mounting, letting gemstones create the design. 12 A pair of bracelets purchased by Nanaline Duke, and later worn by her daughter, also presents a mixture of stylistic generations (Fig. 22). The soft graduated strands of fine pearls evoke the fashion for multistrand pearl dog collars and bracelets in the early-twentieth century. The drum-shaped clasps, set with baguette diamonds, however, are pure modernist design. Doris Duke considered them up-to-date enough to wear—together on one wrist, as was the 1930s fashion—when she was photographed by the celebrated Cecil Beaton (see page 46). Nanaline Duke owned two important rings, both symbols of her new standing as Mrs. James B. Duke, which provide further proof of her love of large gemstones. The compressed globe of the large oriental pearl seen in one ring (Fig. 21) is recognizable in her 1926 portrait (see page 34). The pearl’s large size (nine millimeters) and exotic, yet perfect, shape would have made it especially valuable in its day. By the same token, the monumental emerald-cut diamond from Tiffany’s, nearly twenty carats in weight, speaks of a new, more hard-edged glamour (Fig. 20). As the decades progressed, so did Nanaline Duke’s taste in jewelry. Her Tiffany pendant watch and the diamond-mounted gold mesh purse represent styles from the turn of the century. But, styles changed and so did her preferences. Two pieces she added to her collection continued to document her shifting taste. James Buchanan Duke bought Nanaline a wristwatch with a pearl bracelet as a Christmas present in 1922 from Charlton & Co., in New York City, a prominent American jeweler. In 1935, Nanaline instructed Cartier to remake it with a diamond bracelet but to keep the original Charlton dial (Fig. 27).13 Wristwatches became popular after World War I, when men wore small watches strapped to their wrists in battle. The bracelet watch for women existed in the nineteenth century but did not gain broad favor until the late 1910s. For ladies of Nanaline Duke’s age (she turned forty-eight in 1919), wristwatches did not really catch on until after World War I. Another piece in her collection, the ruby and diamond lapel watch (Fig. 24), is a rare example of a watch from the 1920s. In contrast, the sautoir watch, worn on a long chain around the neck, was offered by just about every retail jeweler.14 An elegant evening bag from Cartier exemplifies the monochromatic, geometric, art deco style of the early 1930s (Fig. 23). The design is based on Chinese motifs, an inspiration that is evident in Cartier’s jewelry from this period. Contrasted with the solid gold mesh and large diamonds of Nanaline Duke’s earlier purse, this one, while probably far more costly, is subtle and discreet. Two more bracelets owned and worn by Nanaline Duke underline her generation’s love of softer jewelry styles well into the 1920s. Like the pair of bracelets in Figure 22 with the drum-form clasps, the intricate, Middle Eastern latticework of pearls on a bracelet (Fig. 29 ) contrasts with the complex geometry of the diamond plaque at its center. Cartier’s extensive work for the nobility of India might have influenced the design of this piece. Certainly Nanaline’s love of large stones influenced the acquisition of the only large colored stone in her collection—a 35.54 carat Ceylon sapphire, set in a bracelet (Fig. 30) of pearl strands that James B. Duke bought for her from Cartier in 1925. Ceylon has produced fine sapphires for at least twenty-five hundred years, but this source, according to Benjamin Zucker in Gems and Jewels, “….is not as plentiful as before.” 15 Today, it is rare to find a 13 stone with the quality of the sapphire in this bracelet, precisely the type of stone that Louis Cartier would have sought for his jewelry designs. Cartier’s fame for colored stones in the 1920s is evident only in this single piece in Nanaline’s collection. Her daughter, on the other hand, would glory in colored stones throughout her own jewelry-collecting lifetime. It is hard to imagine why Nanaline purchased the bracelet in Figure 28 from Cartier in 1939. It is an elegant and handsome piece, architectonic in its late art deco modernism, massive and tailored in its styling. It does not seem like the sort of jewel a woman nearing seventy would have purchased. And yet Nanaline owned it until her death in 1962. Perhaps its novelty intrigued her, or maybe it reminded her of the heavy, hinged gold bangles of her own mother’s mid-Victorian youth in Macon, Georgia. Whatever her reasons for buying it, it seems oddly out of harmony with the rest of her jewelry. Two pairs of clips—one of ear clips and one of dress clips—also offer a final insight into Nanaline Duke’s evolving taste. The Egyptian lotus-form diamond ear clips from 1933, purchased at Cartier by Nanaline, hug the ear—the scroll fitting neatly over the lobe—in a most flattering fashion (Fig. 26 ). These ear clips are in keeping with the all-white look of jewelry at the end of the 1920s and the beginning of the 1930s. One of the last pieces of jewelry from Nanaline’s collection—a pair of leaf-form diamond dress clips ornamented with rosettes of sapphires (Fig. 25) —evoke the romantic naturalism of the nineteenth century. Made by an unknown jeweler in New York in the early 1940s, these clips illustrate the rise of naturalism in jewelry in this decade. Doris Duke’s own jewelry would also show this influence. To Nanaline, however, these clips would have reminded her of Victorian flower-form jewels, a familiar landmark in a world that had changed irrevocably from the one she entered as Mrs. James B. Duke in 1907. When Doris Duke began to buy jewelry, her taste favored the more classical jewels from the 1930s. Unlike her mother, she did not go for the big gems. Even at the outset, her style was geared more towards design rather than the intrinsic value of the “big rocks.” This early preference presaged her choice of jewelry for the rest of her life. Perhaps being the richest woman in the world meant she did not have to impress others. For most of her life, she was hounded by the press, who were eager to take a photograph of her no matter what the occasion. She shunned publicity; even when her husband, James Cromwell, was seeking a political position, she avoided the press. As a child and young adult, since there had been many kidnapping threats, she never went out in public without a bodyguard. This emphasis on security caused her to travel incognito, to make airplane reservations under an assumed name, or to arrive at the airport at the last minute so no one would know beforehand that she was flying. This need for privacy influenced the way she lived and carried over to the jewelry she purchased. Doris Duke patronized the foremost jewelry maisons, such as Cartier and Van Cleef & Arpels, as well as rising designers such as Paul Flato, Fulco di Verdura, Seaman Schepps, and David Webb, all of New York City. She often instructed them to make new jewels out of old ones, a custom she would have learned from her mother who was fond of having old jewels refashioned into updated styles, retaining the gemstones but getting rid of the mountings. Alas, the Duke women were not the only ones to do this, a major reason why 14 so many important gemstone jewels from past periods no longer exist. In the early 1930s, when Doris Duke began buying her own jewelry, she was still under the influence of her mother, shopping at the same salons and choosing jewelry that followed the conservative taste of the period. The diamonds in her jewelry tended to be shaped in simple geometric cuts where the stones dictate the design but do not overwhelm. The pair of bracelets in Figure 35 feature two pavé-set diamond buckle motifs with circular, lozenge, marquise, and baguette-cut diamonds. The diamonds are set in such a way that the bracelets are flexible, feeling almost like a piece of fabric. These bracelets can be joined to form a choker necklace, a popular feature in the early 1930s, which would have accessorized the new fashions. In place of the flapper image of short skirts and plunging necklines of the mid-1920s, there was a shift to a more traditional silhouette through figureslimming clothes in the 1930s. The stock market Doris Duke on her wedding day, September 1, 1947, crash of 1929 and the ensuing Great Depression when she married Porfirio Rubirosa. She is wearing the marked the end of an era and the temporary end diamond and yellow gold choker (Fig. 68 ). of prosperity. Paradoxically, as day clothes became more conservative in design, evening dresses were the most elegant of the century. This choker/necklace would have gracefully encircled the neck of the young Doris Duke at a chic evening engagement. Although most of the jewelry Doris Duke bought in the 1930s is monochromatic, she did buy a few pieces with emeralds.Yet, even when she selected fine jewelry with important gem material, it was the color and not the size that mattered to her. The two emerald bead necklaces are such examples (Figs. 31, 32). The emeralds are fine specimens, strung simply like pearls; their monetary value resides in the quality of the stones. She would have worn them at the collar of a tailored suit, where they would have attracted the attention of both the discerning gem connoisseur and the untutored person who would not know their true worth. Besides valuing their superb color, Miss Duke also would have enjoyed them because emerald was the stone most associated with India.16 Cartier capitalized on the emerald’s popularity in India, bringing back cabochon emeralds or emeralds engraved with floral designs that they set into imaginative jewels. The clip brooch and bracelet in Figures 33 and 34 (the former was remade in 1954 from an earlier design) that Cartier had created for Doris Duke are good examples. Cabochon emeralds are arranged within the central plaque; the Indian theme is evident in the lotus design of the clip brooch. 15 The Eastern theme is also seen on the vanity case in Figure 41. In the days of glamour, when the fashionable lady went out in the evening, she deemed herself undressed if she was without her requisite cosmetic articles, usually consolidated within an exquisitely designed vanity case. According to Sylvie Raulet, “…the most trivial item….offered a delightful pretext for combining the richest materials in the creation of a unique work of art—a work which could compete with the rarest pieces of the Renaissance and the eighteenth century.”17 The vanity case, based on the oriental inro, was comprised of several compartments holding essential items such as a compact, lipstick, perfume flask, and comb. The Cartier vanity case (Fig. 41) in the Duke collection is decorated with lapis lazuli and colored gemstones with a central floral Indian motif reminiscent of an oriental carpet, a true work of art in miniature form. Doris Duke married James Cromwell on February 13, 1935. They spent most of that year on their honeymoon, traveling to India, where she began her lifelong love affair with the arts of the East. The couple bought prodigiously: carpets, ivory carvings, tiles, jade, bronze statuary, clothing, and jewelry. On their return trip, they stopped in Hawaii where a year later Doris Duke bought a plot of land near Diamond Head for her home, Shangri La. While overseeing construction of the estate, she became friends with Sam Kahanamoku, a swimming champion who, at some point, gave her a bracelet with his swimming medals (Fig. 77). Jewelry of the 1930s took on a softer look. Although straight geometric lines continued to dominate, curves were introduced and overall shapes became rounder. In response, Doris Duke had some of her outdated jewelry adapted into the new forms. From a clip brooch/ hair barrette, she had Cartier create the pair of hair slides in Figure 40 in simple, half-moon shapes set with circular and baguette-cut diamonds. These hair slides are the type of jewelry she favored in the 1930s—nothing too ostentatious, nothing too bold. This also holds true for her earrings. In contrast to the long, dangling style from the art deco period, earrings now hugged the ear lobe. Another interesting piece of jewelry designed by Cartier is the pair of ear pendants in Figure 38. These elegant but understated jewels are beautifully conceived incorporating briolette diamonds. Most available reference material on diamonds agrees on one point about briolettes: they are a very rare form of cutting. A briolette is a pear or drop-shaped diamond whose surface is entirely covered with triangular facets. It is the oldest form of symmetrical diamond cutting, dating to the seventeenth century when advancements in optics opened the door to a way of faceting diamonds to allow greater light refraction. Over the ensuing centuries, this type of diamond cut has been the preferred choice for royal jewels. Along with wide bracelets, double-clip brooches became a staple of the decade. They could be worn clipped to lapels or hats, or hooked together and worn as one brooch. The clip brooches in Figure 37 exemplify this flexibility of use. Convertible jewelry that could function in many ways was popular throughout the 1930s, perhaps in response to the Great Depression and the need to economize evident in all strata of society. By the 1940s, the economy was beginning to rebound. During the war, many women took over the jobs of men serving abroad; even Doris Duke served as a wartime International News Service correspondent. New challenges for women necessitated a new wardrobe. Large shoulder 16 pads lent an air of the military to jackets, coats, and dresses, and “separates,” ensembles of interchangeable skirts and blouses, were introduced. After the war, Christian Dior’s “New Look” brought a softer silhouette to the figure. Jewelry followed the new fashion trends with designs evolving into three-dimensional configurations with scrolls, volutes, domes, and rectangles. Curves were back, and nowhere is this more evident than in the double-clip brooch (Fig. 36 ) by Paul Flato. Streams of baguette-cut diamond, ribbon-like elements flow from the center. Drama had returned to jewelry design. During the war years, it was American, rather than European, fashion designers who dictated what American women would wear. This was indeed true of jewelry designers. Up until the late 1930s, jewelry design in America had followed the dictates of European styles. Then, as a result of the Depression, many jewelers were forced to close their doors. Those who survived, or even flourished, were those who created innovative concepts and designs. Trabert & Hoeffer, Inc.– Mauboussin introduced the “Reflections” line whereby clients could design their own jewelry using parts made from castings. They, along with Paul Flato, catered to an emerging group of stage and screen stars avidly seeking the latest designs. Fashion magazines such as Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar were quick to illustrate the latest styles. In the midst of the hard times, an invigorated style emerged reflecting developments in the fine and decorative arts, where machine-age concepts and a return to naturalism were occurring simultaneously. The latter was fostered by several new designers not connected with the main jewelry houses. One of the earliest and most innovative of these designers was Fulco di Verdura who, after working with Paul Flato, opened his own business in 1939. To him, design was always paramount. He took simple, universal images and turned them into playful, imaginative jewels. For the brooch in Figure 70, he borrowed the Indian head on the reverse of the five-cent piece, using a baroque pearl for the feathered headdress. This design is reminiscent of George Catlin’s paintings and drawings of American Indians from the nineteenth century.18 In the early 1940s,Verdura created a series of brooches made out of painted ivory chessmen from India (Fig. 75). He took these amusing figures and turned them into small works of art adorned with precious gemstones and pearls.19 These chessmen were not like anything that any other jeweler was making in the early 1940s. Instead, the chessmen were a refreshing look at jewelry design, based not on the value of the gem material but on creativity. Verdura was not afraid to stretch beyond traditional parameters to find a new, exciting vernacular, which was eagerly embraced by his clients. The chessmen must have appealed to Doris Duke, whose artistic eye had been honed by her collecting of Eastern artifacts and, in particular, by her strong love of India. Doris Duke purchased a crossover necklace from Verdura (Fig. 50 ) that, although using traditional jewelry materials, was created in an innovative manner. Adorned with citrines attached to dangling wires, the necklace swoops around the neck in a manner similar to the diamond-set “Comet” necklace that Coco Chanel created in 1932 or the vine necklace by Paul Flato.20 Verdura, who had worked for both Chanel and Flato, would have known this style. One can imagine Miss Duke carrying the gem-set vanity, also by Verdura (Fig. 63), that coordinates with this necklace. 17 In the 1960s, Doris Duke added a suite of pink topaz and diamonds by Verdura to her jewelry collection (Fig. 49). The necklace is formed as a circlet surrounding the neck from which pink topaz drops are suspended. Ear pendants and a coordinating bracelet complete the suite. She probably selected this jewelry as an appropriate complement to a dress or suit. Throughout her life, Doris Duke frequented Verdura’s salon. Ward Landrigan, who purchased the company in 1985, remembers her buying cuff links for gifts. As he said, “She knew what she wanted and would study a piece intently. But, she was very specific…for example, she liked blue.”21 Blue is the dominant color of the Seaman Schepps three-piece ensemble (Figs. 60, 61, 62) set with cabochon sapphires. Schepps, a talented jeweler who had opened for business in the 1920s, was a victim of the stock market crash in 1929 and was forced to close his shop on Sixth Avenue in New York City. Realizing that only new, innovative jewelry was saleable, he reinvented himself, opening a shop a few years later that offered only unique designs. He is credited as one of the designers to introduce whimsy back into jewelry design by incorporating man-made materials in combination with precious and semiprecious gemstones. The bracelet of this set (each piece was purchased at different times) is composed of five rows of cabochon sapphires, each stone a different size to give interest to the piece. The clasp is disguised in a buckle-type attachment decorated with engraved sapphires and set with diamonds and other gemstones that recalls the “fruit salad” bracelets created by Cartier in the late 1920s.22 The bunch-of-grapes clip brooch (Fig. 60) is large in scale but very wearable. In it Schepps made each cabochon sapphire grape a different shade of blue, just as on a real bunch of grapes—almost inviting one to pluck a grape to eat! The 1950s was a time of affluence in America, similar to the late 1990s, in which this country sustained an extended period of growth when large segments of the population enjoyed the benefits of wealth. Fine jewelry was no longer the province of the rich. The middle class could now afford precious stone jewelry and desired to emulate such legendary screen stars as Grace Kelly, whose wedding to Prince Rainier III of Monaco on April 19, 1957, was an event that captivated the world. Jewelry of the 1950s evolved from the bold look of the previous decade into sumptuous gem-set creations. No longer would settings dominate a piece of jewelry; gemstones now became the focal point. The jeweler who most epitomized this new direction was David Webb. Following in the footsteps of Flato,Verdura, and Schepps, he created bold, sculptural jewels that came to symbolize the essence of the modern woman in the second half of the twentieth century, when women began to assume a more dominant role in the work force and wanted jewels to reflect who and what they were. Doris Duke was in her early fifties when she began buying jewelry from David Webb. Working closely with him, she was able to take advantage of his bold and colorful use of stones to achieve designs emphasizing the overall distinctiveness and elegance that suited her taste and lifestyle. When she bought from Webb, she wanted not just a necklace but also coordinating earrings. Ruby beads, accented with pearls, form a fringe necklace (Fig. 52), inspired by Eastern examples; another necklace is made of engraved fluted emerald beads, which could take months to make (Fig. 47). This necklace bears a relationship to the 18 multistrand necklaces favored by Indian maharajahs. Webb designed ear pendant drops (Figs. 48, 51) for both necklaces that could be suspended from a pair of diamond-set scroll earrings (Fig. 56 ). Opals with crystal spacers highlight another necklace formed of two strands and it, like the above mentioned necklaces, has a matching pair of ear pendants (Figs. 53, 54). The turquoise, sapphire, and diamond suite consists of a necklace and bracelet that Miss Duke purchased in 1965 (Figs. 44, 46 ). According to Stanley Silberstein at David Webb, Inc., “The necklace was a private commission for Miss Duke.”23 Four years later, she returned to Webb to buy ear clips with the same stones, this time set in all platinum (Fig. 45). Perhaps the most spectacular David Webb jewel in Doris Duke’s collection is a diamond brooch, made with pear-shaped diamonds from a bracelet that her mother had given to her (Fig. 55). This floral spray bears similarities to the jewelry the Parisian jeweler, Massim, designed in the 1850s with mountings with waterfall, or pampille, settings in which diamonds are set on articulated wires that quiver when worn. It was designed with three stems that curl upwards, evolving into three leaves from which either pear- or marquise-cut diamonds are suspended. The theme of movement is provided both in the design of the gracefully arched stems and leaves that direct the eye to the dangling diamonds, as well as in the actual movement of the hanging diamonds themselves. Attention has been paid to details such as the leaves, where circular-cut diamonds decorate each leaf while baguette-cut diamonds delineate the center vein. It is truly a spectacular jewel, in keeping with the splendid diamond jewelry her mother owned. Another spectacular jewel acquired by Doris Duke is a one-of-a-kind pair of diamond, pearl, and baroque pearl ear pendants measuring 31⁄2 inches in length (Fig. 69 ). With the diamond-set rosettes and dangling elements, they are similar in design to Indian jewelry, like many other pieces in her collection. Miss Duke also owned a pair of costume jewelry ear pendants that are almost identical to this pair. In fact in photographs of her, it is hard to distinguish which pair she is wearing. In contrast to the Webb ear pendants, Doris Duke owned two pairs by Van Cleef & Arpels that clip onto the ear lobe without any dangling elements. In one, diamonds are patterned in the guise of snowflakes (Fig. 66 ); the other features scrolls set with aquamarines and diamonds (Fig. 67). Both are easy to wear during the day or into the evening. They both recall her mother’s Cartier scroll ear clips from 1933 (Fig. 26 ). She also owned a suite of “Hawaii” flower jewelry by Van Cleef & Arpels (Fig. 73). It is made with clusters of flowers consisting of diamond centers and alternating sapphire and ruby petals, arranged in dome-like constructions. The last piece of Western jewelry that we know Doris Duke bought for herself is the pair of Cartier emerald-bead ear clips (Fig. 64) she purchased at auction in 1991, just two years before her death. When one looks at these jewels, one can see why she would want them: set with emeralds, the stone she most associated with India, in the shape of leaves, a reference to nature, they are, like all Cartier jewelry, superbly crafted. These ear clips epitomize both her taste in jewelry and her lifelong love affair with the arts of the East. 19 Doris Duke’s taste for jewels from India dates to 1935, the year she took her honeymoon trip around the world with Jimmy Cromwell. At that time, the Indian subcontinent was still the “jewel in the crown”—the crown being, of course, the British Empire. India was divided into some six hundred autonomous princely states and territories. The glory days of the Mogul empire in the north and west were long gone, but tattered remnants remained, with petty kings and nobles living out their days organizing tiger hunts and other amusements. In the capital city, Delhi, the newly married Cromwells were entertained by the viceroy, Lord Willingdon, and the field marshall, Philip Chetwode.24 It is likely that they were treated to some glittering dinner parties in settings that would have seemed like a fantastic dream in comparison to the luxurious but staid environment they had come from. Even though all the warning signs of change were there, the British Empire in India was still keeping up appearances, maintained by thousands of servants, cooks, and gardeners. Members of the Indian elite would have mixed with the British upper echelon at parties but usually without their wives or other female members of their households. A required stop on the itinerary of all tourists to India in 1935 was, as is now, the Taj Mahal in Agra. Built by the fifth Mogul emperor, Shah Jahan, as a tomb for his beloved wife, Mumtaz, it was supposed to be mirrored by an identical building in black marble on the opposite riverbank, but that never came to pass (this story may be a romantic myth). It is likely that, if the stories of Doris Duke declaring that she wanted a building like the Taj Mahal are true, she already had an eye for the kind of architecture and art that she later collected in such abundance, including jewelry. She hired an architect in Delhi to design doors and windows to be fabricated and inlaid with jade, agate, malachite, lapis lazuli, and mother of pearl by craftsmen in Agra, to be shipped later to America.25 Local craftsmen, descendents of the same families that created the inlaid stonework on the Taj, had fallen on hard times as patronage from the old families was no longer there. The princely states in pre-independence India still supported artists and craftsmen to some degree, even into the 1930s, but industrialization had eaten into the livelihoods of many craft professions. Under these circumstances, a commission from a wealthy American must have been very well received. To understand the jewelry from India that Doris Duke collected, it is important to have some knowledge of the history of the country and how jewelry was viewed within the culture of the land and to understand the forms and styles that had been popular for many centuries. In many cases, these styles are vastly different from Western designs and are, therefore, foreign to our Western sensibilities. The reign of Shah Jahan and the Taj Mahal in the seventeenth century came at the apex of the Mogul empire, when its vast accumulated wealth was spent on creating works of art in every medium. Even their lethal hunting daggers and swords for warfare were exquisitely crafted with jade handles inlaid with rubies and emeralds and with scabbards covered with silk and gold velvet. Nothing in daily use in the Mogul court was left unadorned, and the men were as jeweled and perfumed as the women. Every year on his birthday, Emperor Aurangzeb, the son of Shah Jahan, was weighed against gold, silver, textiles, and other valuables from the Treasure, which were then given to charity. After the ceremony, the guests—including officials, family members, and nobles—gave the Emperor gifts, which were then recorded by scribes. In October 1665, 20 he received diamonds, rubies, emeralds, pearls, gold, silver, carpets, brocades, elephants, and horses, probably worth many times more than what he had given away to charity.26 This custom persisted until at least 1937, two years after the Cromwells’ honeymoon trip, when the Maharajah of Bikaner was weighed in gold ingots on the fiftieth anniversary of his rule, and the equivalent amount in cash was distributed to charity.27 Work in metal, stone work, textiles and, above all, jewelry, was exquisite. Women of the Mogul courts in India, roughly from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries, were treated like exotic imprisoned birds, not allowed the freedom to do much besides compete with each other in the accumulation of jewelry and clothing purchased with the cash allotments they received. A pleasing appearance was rewarded with more gifts of jewels as a sign of approval (in a limited sense not unlike the milieu in which Doris Duke may have been raised).28 Intrigue ruled in the women’s quarters, or zenana, where competition was fierce. As a result, craftsmen tried to outdo each other in creating gilding for the already lovely ladies. Niccolao Manucci, a Venetian who spent many years in India in the last half of the seventeenth century and early part of the eighteenth, and was allowed access to the zenana to administer medical aid, wrote quite detailed descriptions of the women’s jewelry.29 A woman would have her nose pierced with a gold hoop strung with pearls, possibly a smaller ring studded with gems, or as a variation a gold stud. A pendant would be worn on the forehead, attached by bands of pearls or gold chains. There were many variations of earrings, some so long that they had to be attached to the hair or to a neckband to relieve the weight. Upper arms would have armlets, and lower arms and wrists could have multiple bracelets and bangles of various widths. As Manucci recounts, “On their fingers are rich rings, and on the right thumb there is always a ring, where, in place of a stone, there is mounted a little round mirror, having pearls around it. This mirror they use to look at themselves, an act of which they are very fond, at any and every moment.”30 In presentday India, such adornments are still seen during weddings, when borrowed finery or family jewels are brought out for the wedding party. In India, Doris Duke was certainly exposed to abundant local history and folklore, but as she did in her own country, she exercised her own preferences for jewelry and frequently altered pieces to suit her looks and style. A good example is the centerpiece of her Indian jewel collection (Fig. 80), a bib necklace that she had had adapted from a necklace, a pendant clip, and earrings she bought at auction in 1971; the pieces had originally been made in India for the noted Polish soprano, Ganna Walska.31 The enormous diamonds boast their Indian heritage within a distinctly Western design. For Western women, bracelets are probably the most easily wearable items of Indian jewelry, and Miss Duke acquired some wonderful examples. In a pair of delicate bracelets (Fig. 84), rubies are made to look like rose petals, each ruby pierced on the unseen, overlapped edge and threaded with a wire which is then embedded in lac, a natural resin of animal origin, to hold it in place.32 Kara (Fig. 83) is a typical enameled bangle bracelet from Jaipur with elephant head protome terminals. The bracelet opens by means of a tiny screw set to the side of the animal head. This style of bracelet, with animal heads guarding the opening, is believed to have originated in the Near East and spread to India in the third century A.D. The design, 21 still popular in India, became fashionable in the West during the art deco period after Cartier introduced it during the 1920s.33 The animal heads can also take the form of parrots, tigers, snakes, dragons, and makaras, or creatures from Hindu mythology.34 During the late 1960s and early 1970s, when flamboyant “ethnic chic” clothing spread from the so-called “hippie revolution” all the way to the far reaches of Newport society, Indian jewelry fit perfectly with the party clothes of the day. The lovely armlets, or bazuband (Fig. 85), which might have looked quite outrageous if worn with a 1950s gown, would have been worn with perfect aplomb in the early 1970s. These are examples of the most finely worked type of armlet, interlocking units set with diamonds and enameled on the reverse side with tiny flowers. The anklets (Fig. 104) of diamonds set with gold, along with these armlets, would only have been worn by women of great privilege, if not royalty. For a less ostentatious type of armlet, the charming pair with seed pearl bracelets (Fig. 98 ) bears a resemblance to granulated gold jewelry of a similar form. Hands were another area of the body decorated in every possible manner in India. The pair of hand ornaments (Fig. 95), called hathphul, or “hand-flower,” were not just placed on bare hands but were complemented by floral mehndi (henna) designs covering the palms and fingers (as well as the soles of the feet). In a favored technique peculiar to Indian jewelry,35 used in many of the pieces in this collection, stones are set in a purified gold ground, called kundan, which requires heating beaten strips of gold foil and then pressing them around the stones. Kundan was used in the spectacular arya (necklace) made in Bikaner, in the western edge of the Great Indian Desert (Fig. 89). The arya is one of the most complex constructions in Indian traditional jewelry.36 Kundan was also used in many of Doris Duke’s other pieces, such as an armlet from Jaipur set with multicolored stones (Fig. 93) and a pair of ruby and diamond bangles (Fig. 82). A very easy piece for Doris Duke to wear would have been the complex and lovely diamond, pearl, and sapphire gold necklace with polychrome enamel on the reverse and edged with a fringe of tiny pearls (Fig. 88 ). This piece matched her coloring preference in a way that ruby and emerald pieces would not. Belts, either rigid or in sections, were another part of the traditional north Indian court costume. The belt ( kamarband, from which comes cummerbund) from Jaipur (Fig. 99 ) is made of white sapphires set into gold with polychrome enamel on the reverse. Indian earrings were often so long that they covered the entire side of the head and neck, fastening onto the hair under a veil. Two examples of these (Figs. 91, 92) are made in a style still worn by Indian brides. A few pieces from Doris Duke’s collection of Indian jewelry do not belong to the north Indian jewelry tradition. One of these is a magnificent necklace from Madras (Fig. 100), featuring a typically south Indian design with small cabochon-cut rubies probably from Burma, where they occur in gem-bearing gravel of alluvial deposits. Indian craftsmen try to preserve the maximum size of these gems, which are naturally rather small and reasonable in cost.37 Another south Indian piece is the hair ornament in the form of a nagaraja, or snakeking (Fig. 101), meant to be fastened at the nape of the neck. A long, attached jeweled piece 22 ending in tassels—missing from this example—would conceal the wearer’s braid of hair. Typically, this ornament would be worn by brides or by Bharata-natyam dancers. For the latter, the long jeweled braid would sway as they danced.38 Other ornaments depicting the sun and the moon would be fastened higher up on the back of the head. A five-headed nagaraja is sometimes depicted hovering over the head of Goddess Durga as a protector, so this tradition may derive from that source.39 The Thai pieces from the Duke collection provide interesting contrasts to her Indian jewelry. Doris Duke loved Thai art and architecture, and indeed she wanted to build an entire Thai village in Hawaii. However, when appropriate land could not be obtained for it there, she had the village sent to Duke Farms, her Hillsborough, New Jersey, estate. The Thai belt buckle of gold and diamonds (Figs. 105, 106 ) seems more refined and delicate in comparison with the somewhat earthier Indian pieces. Comparing the Indian necklace of rubies and diamonds (Fig. 87) to the Thai necklace of synthetic rubies and silver gilt (Fig. 109 ) gives one a sense of the difference in approach between the two cultures. The foregoing discussion attempts to present the Doris Duke jewelry collection within the context of her family background and her own development as an avid collector. Hopefully, this account has succeeded in showing that this collection is much more than an assemblage of beautiful, expensive pieces that a person of refined tastes and almost unlimited resources accumulated during her long life. Two important aspects make this collection unique and immensely valuable. Firstly, it includes jewelry purchased during almost every period critical to the development of the American jewelry industry, starting from the emergence of the mass market for jewelry in the nineteenth century and spanning through several critical phases of its subsequent evolution to a position of leadership in the twentieth century. At the same time, because of Doris Duke’s strong interest in the arts from the East, the collection provides an excellent perspective on aesthetic values and techniques predominant in India and other Eastern countries, as well as a firsthand view of possibilities for a successful marriage of Eastern and Western jewelry materials and designs. And, of course, guided by her unerring eye, viewing the collection is an undeniable aesthetic delight. 23 End Notes 1. Ulysses Grant Dietz, “The Glitter & The Gold: Fashioning America’s Jewelry,” in The Glitter & The Gold: Fashioning America’s Jewelry (Newark: The Newark Museum, 1997), p. 11. 2. By 1869, there were 1,493 people working full time in the jewelry industry in Newark. See also Ulysses Dietz, “The Glitter & The Gold,” p. 15. 3. It is unlikely that any of this early jewelry belonged to a Duke. Washington Duke, Doris Duke’s paternal grandfather, was twice widowed by the end of the Civil War. Moreover, the Dukes were smalltime, rural farmers—respectable, but relatively poor. It was probably not until James B. Duke’s generation that Duke women would own fine jewelry. For illustration of other examples of coral jewelry, see Martha Gandy Fales, Jewelry in America 1600-1900, (Woodbridge, Suffolk: Antique Collector’s Club, 1995), pp. 244-45. 4. Janet Zapata, “The Names Behind the Jewelry,” in The Glitter & The Gold, p. 169. 5. Ferdinand Herpers of Newark, New Jersey, patented the first pronged setting for diamonds in 1872, just one year after the Kimberly Pipe was discovered. See Ulysses Dietz, The Glitter & The Gold, p. 17. 6. There is a dress set of mother of pearl with small diamonds (Fig. 111) that was most likely Mr. Duke’s and a plain gold pocket watch that belonged to Doris Duke’s half-brother, Walker Inman (Fig. 120). 7. Jenna Weissman Joselit, “Jewelry: The Natural Gift,” in The Glitter & The Gold, p. 22, fig. 13. 8. Dietz, “Producing What America Wanted: Jewelry from Newark’s Workshops,” in The Glitter & The Gold, p. 89. 9. According to Elizabeth Steinberg, archivist, Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, this piece was listed in Nanaline Duke’s estate appraisal in 1962. This contradicts the evidence offered by the piece itself and suggests the possibility that Doris Duke gave it to her mother after her divorce from Cromwell in 1943. 10. The original invoice is in the Duke University Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library. 11. Dietz, The Glitter & The Gold, p. 66. 12. James B. Duke bought another item which, also, is recorded on the same invoice as the diamond necklace. He purchased a tiara (probably dismantled at a later date) that could convert into a corsage ornament and shoulder brooch. Set with seven large pear-shaped diamonds, that piece cost James B. Duke fr 110,000; Cartier provided all of the stones. A copy of this invoice is located in the Duke University Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library. 13. We would like to thank Bonnie Selfe at Cartier for noticing that the bracelet on this watch is by Cartier and not by the maker on the dial, Charlton & Co. 14. Newark’s Henry Blank & Co. provided such diamond-studded sautoir and lapel watches for both Tiffany and Cartier at this period. For an illustration of a sautoir watch from an unknown maker from the early 1920s, see Janet Zapata, “Jewelry at the Toledo Museum of Art,” The Magazine Antiques, vol. CLVIII (October 2000): p. 511. 15. Quoted in Benjamin Zucker, Gems and Jewels: A Connoisseur’s Guide (New York: Thames & Hudson, 1987), p. 33. 16. Even though the finest emeralds come from the mines in Colombia, they are commonly associated with India. The maharajahs, fascinated with the stone, bought the rarest and best examples. In the nineteenth century, Westerners purchased emeralds that had been exported to India. 17. Quoted in Sylvie Raulet, Art Deco Jewelry, (New York: Rizzoli International Publications, Inc., 1985), p. 271. 18. These paintings served as inspiration for many designers such as Charles Grosjean at Tiffany & Co., who designed a flatware set for William Randolph Hearst with dancing Indians on the handle. For illustration, see William P. Hood, Jr. with Roslyn Berlin and Edward Wawrynek, Tiffany Silver Flatware 1845-1905: When Dining Was an Art (Woodbridge, Suffolk: Antique Collectors Club, 1999), pp. 258-261. 19. When the chessmen were first offered, they sold out quickly, bought by prominent society ladies. For more information and illustrations of other examples, see Patricia Corbett, Verdura The Life and Work of a Master Jeweler (New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 2002), pp. 110-111. 20. For illustration of the necklace by Coco Chanel, see Patrick Mauriés, Jewelry by Chanel (Boston, Toronto, London: Little, Brown and Company, 1993), cover illustration. For illustration of vine necklace by Paul Flato, owned by Lily Pons, see Penny Proddow, Debra Healy and Marion Fasel, Hollywood Jewels Movies-Jewelry-Stars (New York; Harry N. Abrams 1992), p. 115. 24 21. Janet Zapata telephone conversation with Ward Landrigan, February 2003. 22. Around 1924, Cartier introduced a line of jewelry known as “tutti fruiti” or “fruit salad.” The design was based on the Chinese continuous vine with a diamond-stem from which “grew” engraved rubies, sapphires and emerald leaves. For illustration, see Judy Rudoe, Cartier 1900 -1939 (New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. and Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1997), p. 226-227. 23. Janet Zapata telephone conversation with Stanley Silberstein, David Webb, Inc., February 2003 24. Stephanie Mansfield, The Richest Girl in the World, (New York: G. P. Putnam, 1992), p.155. 25. The Richest Girl in the World, p.154. 26. Oppi Untracht, Traditional Jewelry of India, (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1997), p. 343. 27. Untracht,Traditional Jewelry of India, p.343. 28. Untracht,Traditional Jewelry of India, p. 349. 29. Untracht,Traditional Jewelry of India, p. 264. 30 Untracht,Traditional Jewelry of India, p. 347. 31. The Polish opera soprano Ganna Walska sang with Enrico Caruso and played for Arturo Toscanini in the earlytwentieth century. For more information, see Ganna Walska, Always Room at the Top, (New York: Richard R. Smith, 1943). 32. Untracht,Traditional Jewelry of India, p.324. Lac is produced by an insect indigenous to India. It is the only natural resin of animal origin. It is used as a red dye, as a setting for stones, and is the main ingredient of shellac. 33. For illustrations of Cartier jewelry based on Indian prototypes, see Hans Nadelhoffer, Cartier Jewelers Extraordinary (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1984), color plate 35. 34. Untracht,Traditional Jewelry of India, pp. 270, 404. 35. Manuel Keene, et. al., Treasury of the World: Jewelled Arts of India in the Age of the Mughals (London and New York: Thames & Hudson, 2001), p. 18. 36. Untracht,Traditional Jewelry of India, pp. 348-349. 37. Untracht,Traditional Jewelry of India, p. 323. 38. For more information and an illustration a nagaraja attached to a jeweled piece, Traditional Jewelry of India, p. 50-51. 39. A.G. Mitchell, Hindu Gods and Goddesses (New Delhi and London: UBS Publisher’s Distributors Ltd., 1982), plate 47. 25 26 a legacy of gentility A Legacy of Gentility: Doris Duke’s Heirloom Jewelry Because jewelry is a personal possession, owners often attach hidden meanings and associations to it. As long as it remains in the domain of one person or one family, as long as we know who bought it and who owned it, a piece of jewelry can suggest possible meanings far beyond those apparent in the Doris Duke and her father, James B. Duke physical reality of the object. However, with the passage of time, symbolism grows cloudy and meanings can fade, which is why so much jewelry often changes hands or is dismantled. Doris Duke owned and kept a number of pieces of heirloom jewelry that must have meant something special to her, something that linked her life to those who came before her and lived very different lives from her own. While we cannot know for certain what these objects meant to her, the fact that she held onto these pieces throughout her life suggests to us that they held some sort of personal significance. The jewelry that Doris Duke wore as a child, gifts from her family and friends, tells a story about the way children were valued by society in the early-twentieth century. The jewelry she inherited from her grandmother, Florine Russell Holt, speaks eloquently of what jewelry meant to middle-class women in America in the second half of the nineteenth century. The small group of jewelry that belonged to James Buchanan Duke must have held its own special significance, a connection to the man who loved her so unreservedly and died while she was still so young. With a few exceptions, such as her gold bangle and the seed pearl jewelry, it is unlikely that Doris Duke wore any of this “legacy” jewelry. It was not in style by the time she was born and, more importantly, it was not her style as she grew and matured. Nonetheless, she held onto it because it connected her to her own heritage and reminded her of who she was and from where she came from. 28 Doris Duke’s Heirloom Jewelry 1. Barrette and handy pins Barrette marked Carter, Sloan & Co., Newark, New Jersey Handy pins, stamped 14k Pearls, gold Length of barrette: 2 1⁄4 inches Doris Duke would have worn this barrette as a young girl. When she grew older, it was replaced by more elaborate diamond-set examples. 2. Seed pearl locket 1923 Seed pearl, gold Verso engraved “Doris Duke 1923” L: 1 1⁄8 inches Pearls symbolized innocence and were given to young girls before they reached their maturity. This locket is such an example, probably given to Doris Duke by her father. 3. Bangle c. 1912 Gold Engraved in script “MM to DD” Doris Duke was given this simple, unadorned bangle when she was a child, perhaps even a baby. The many dents suggest that it was often worn. 29 A Legacy of Gentility: 4. Pocketknife c. 1900-1920 Gold Monogrammed “J.B.D.” L: 3 inches A watch and chain, pocketknife, signet ring, tie pin, and cuff links were de rigueur jewelry for men at the turn of the century. 5. Cuff links Carrington & Co., Newark, New Jersey 1900-1920 Amethyst, gold 6. Cuff links Carrington & Co., Newark, New Jersey 1900-1920 Moonstone, gold, platinum 7. Cuff links Mark for Tiffany & Co., New York 1900-1920 Turquoise, gold 8. Coral demi-parure, comprising brooch and ear pendants c. 1860s Coral, gold Length of brooch: 2 inches Length of ear pendants: 1 3⁄4 inches The grape was the archetypal plant of the midnineteenth century, symbolizing the fecundity and plenty of an expanding nation. This demi-parure retains its original box, keeping it safe from damage. 9. Coral bracelets c. 1860s Coral, gold L: 6 1⁄2 inches The florid naturalism popular in the midnineteenth century is evident in these bracelets. Such Italian-made coral jewelry was commonly worn among genteel women during the Civil War. 30 Doris Duke’s Heirloom Jewelry 10. Pendant watch Outer case: maker’s mark with anchor/14k/ Dueber/mark with anchor within shield/1376156 Movement: Elgin Nat’l Watch Co/2983182 c. 1890 Yellow, green, and rose gold, diamond Engraved “FH” on shield reserve H: 2 1⁄4 inches In place of the more traditional reliance on enameling and engraving, watchcase makers experimented with different color golds to produce polychromatic designs. This watch is set with a single diamond, a sparkle point to draw the eye to the decoration. 11. Demi-parure comprising cameo brooch and earrings c. 1880 Agate, pearls, gold Diameter of brooch: 1 1⁄4 inches Cameo jewelry was ubiquitous among middle-class consumers from the time of the Civil War until the 1890s. 12. Pair of woven bracelets c. 1880 Gold Engraved “Holt” on underside of clasp L: 7 inches 31 A Legacy of Gentility: 13. Chatelaine mesh purse 1900-1910 Diamonds, gold Stamped “14k” W: 6 1⁄2 inches Mesh purses were popular from the 1890s to the 1920s, usually worn suspended by a chatelaine clip from the waistband or belt. Only wealthy women carried gold mesh examples; only the wealthiest had them studded with diamonds. 14. Chatelaine vanity case c. 1915 Sapphires, diamonds, green gold, mirror, ivory Engraved on reserve on compartment: DDC Engraved on lower rim: E.R. Stotesbury, Philadelphia U.S.A. H: 3 inches The vanity case, or nécessaire, was an essential part of a lady’s attire. It was equipped with a mirror, ivory writing tablet, and compartments for powder and lipstick. 32 Nanaline Duke’s Jewelry a legacy of glamour 33 A Legacy of Glamour: The Jewelry of Nanaline Holt Inman Duke Unlike her daughter, Nanaline Holt Inman Duke was not born to wealth. Having been raised in Macon, Georgia, in what was kindly referred to as “reduced circumstances,” Nanaline would have grown up haunted by a sense that fine jewelry was beyond her reach. With her first marriage to a prosperous businessman, William Inman, she could at last afford the kind of jewelry her mother owned before the family’s financial reverses in the post-Civil War years. When, as a widow in the early-twentieth Oil painting of Nanaline Duke by Philip century, she captured the heart of one of the richest men in the Alexius de Laszlo de Lombos, dated 1926. world, all financial barriers disappeared. After her marriage to She is wearing a pearl necklace and the oriental pearl ring (Fig. 21). James Buchanan Duke in 1907, the former Nanaline Holt could at last have anything she wanted, including the finest jewelry. The great rope of pearls that she wears in her 1926 portrait is probably the one that James B. Duke bought for her in 1907 at J. Dreicer & Sons in New York, for the astonishing sum of $180,000. (The invoice survives in the Duke University Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library.) In the days before the introduction of cultured pearls, a natural-pearl necklace like this was as precious as one set with diamonds. And, of course, not only did her husband buy her opulent gifts, but Nanaline Duke could also buy herself beautiful jewels—and she did. The jewelry in this section defines Nanaline Duke’s taste and distinguishes it from that of her daughter Doris. Unlike Doris Duke, Nanaline did not venture outside the realm of the classic jewel, nor did she venture into exotic or artistic jewelry. Even when she purchased things that were similar in style to those her daughter was buying in the 1930s and 1940s, Nanaline favored the opulent glamour of the early-twentieth century, the era when railroad kings and oil kings and tobacco kings ruled society, and their wives bedecked themselves in jewels suited to the New World royalty they considered themselves to be. Whatever the differences in taste, it is evident that her mother’s love for fine, elegant jewelry made an indelible imprint on Doris Duke that encouraged the development of her own aesthetic values. 34 Nanaline Duke’s Jewelry 15. Diamond and pearl festoon necklace 1908 Diamonds, oriental pearl, platinum. Approximate weight of pear-shaped diamond: 5.40 carats; approximate weight of cushion-cut diamond: 4.65 carats; approximate weight of marquise-cut diamond: 2.40 carats. Jewelry from the belle époque period is reflective of the Louis XVI styles made popular by the sale of the French crown jewels in 1889. Necklaces were designed in festoons that elegantly draped around the neck. This necklace was made by Cartier with a selection of diamonds provided by James B. Duke. The original invoice is dated December 24, 1908. 35 A Legacy of Glamour: 36 16. Diamond and pearl tiara Cartier, New York, no. 2419203 1924 Diamonds, oriental pearl, platinum. Approximate weight of two pear-shaped diamonds: 2.70 and 2.27 carats. The new industrial wealth of nineteenth-century America adopted the trappings of European nobility. Elaborate diamond-studded jewels graced the bodice of the well-dressed lady, while a tiara crowned her head. This tiara is believed to have been purchased at Cartier by Nanaline or James B. Duke on March 1, 1924, at a cost of $23,000. This tiara was included in the exhibition, Tiara, at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in 2000 and was illustrated in the accompanying book, Tiara, by Diana Scarisbrick. Nanaline Duke’s Jewelry 17. Diamond bracelet Cartier, New York, no. 2716752 1927 L: 7 inches Diamonds, platinum. Approximate weight of marquise-cut diamond: 7.19 carats; of one pear-shaped diamond: 7.03 carats; of another pear-shaped diamond: 6.24 carats; of two remaining pear-shaped diamonds: 4.25 and 3.50 carats. Nanaline Duke’s love of large diamonds is evident in this bracelet. The geometric shapes of the large diamonds are juxtaposed with stepped motifs derived from architecture of ancient civilizations such as Babylonian ziggurats and Mayan and Aztec temples. 37 A Legacy of Glamour: 18. Pendant watch and chatelaine pin On cuvette: Longines/Grand Prix/Paris/1889 Outer case: k18, maker’s mark/783923 c. 1890 Diamonds, enamel, gold H: 3 inches This elegant watch probably dates from Nanaline Duke’s first marriage. Chatelaine watches were typically worn on the lapel of a dress bodice during the daytime. 19. Pendant watch Tiffany & Co., New York c. 1900 Diamonds, emeralds, platinum, guilloché with transparent green and blue enamel. H: 1 5⁄8 inches Such exquisitely detailed ladies’ watches were typical of the foremost American and European jewelry of the day. 38 Nanaline Duke’s Jewelry 20. Emerald-cut diamond ring Tiffany & Co., New York 1935 Diamond, platinum; emerald-cut diamond weighing approximately 19.72 carats According to Stephanie Mansfield in The Richest Girl in the World, Nanaline Duke lost her “$40,000 diamond ring” at a bridge party. It was returned to her by a friend. 21. Oriental pearl ring c. 1910 Oriental pearl, diamonds, platinum Diameter of pearl: 9 mm. Before Mikimoto perfected the cultured pearl, oriental pearls were as sought after and as costly as fine diamonds. 22. Pair of bracelets c. 1930 Pearls, diamonds, platinum L: 6 1⁄2 inches Although the clasps on these bracelets are art deco in style, the pearls give a softness that evokes the early years of the twentieth century. 39 A Legacy of Glamour: 40 23. Diamond-set silk evening bag Cartier, New York 1934 Diamonds, enamel, silk, platinum H: 5 3⁄4 inches The severely geometric black and white color scheme of this evening bag exemplifies the monochromatic aspect of the art deco style. Nanaline Duke’s Jewelry 24. Diamond and ruby lapel watch On dial: Jaeger / P.L. Levy Outer case: no. 77639 c. 1925 Diamonds, rubies, platinum H: 1 ⁵⁄₁₆ inches By the mid 1920s, watch casing design had reached an art with designers creating novelty items such as ring watches, purse watches and, more rarely, lapel watches. 25. Pair of diamond and sapphire dress clips American 1940-1945 Diamonds, sapphires, platinum H: 2 inches By the end of the 1930s, flowers were once again popular. Made in a variety of styles and materials, the most favored were diamond-set confections. 26. Diamond scroll ear clips Cartier, New York 1933 Diamonds, platinum H: 1 ⁷⁄₁₆ inches Even after her husband’s death, Nanaline Duke never lost her taste for jewelry. She purchased these ear clips from Cartier on November 22, 1933, for $1,500. 41 A Legacy of Glamour: 42 27. Diamond wristwatch Dial signed by Charlton & Co., New York; diamond bracelet by Cartier, New York Charlton dial and movement, 1922; Cartier diamond bracelet, 1935 Diamonds, platinum L: 6 3⁄4 inches On December 20,1922, James B. Duke purchased a diamond wristwatch with a pearl band from Charlton & Co. On January 29, 1935, Nanaline Duke had Cartier replace the pearl band with an elaborate diamond-set bracelet, retaining the original dial and movement. Nanaline Duke’s Jewelry 28. Diamond and sapphire bangle bracelet Cartier, New York, no. 3918096 1939 Sapphires, diamonds, gold, platinum 43 A Legacy of Glamour: 29. Diamond and pearl bracelet Cartier, New York, no. 3519688 c. 1920 Pearls, diamonds, platinum L: 6 1⁄2 inches The design on this bracelet with a central diamond plaque from which strung pearls are attached is a modification of the choker necklace from the turn of the century. 30. Ceylon sapphire, pearl and diamond bracelet Cartier, New York, no. 24121 1925 Ceylon sapphire, sapphires, diamonds, pearls, platinum. Approximate weight of sapphire: 35.54 carats. L: 6 1⁄2 inches James B. Duke continued to lavish gifts of jewelry on his wife right up to his death in 1925. He provided Cartier with the stones for this bracelet, but they did not receive the payment of $5,630 for it until November 8, 1925, after James B. Duke’s death. 44 Nanaline Duke’s Jewelry an independent woman An Independent Woman: Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1930s In 1933, when Doris Duke turned twenty-one, she took a controlling interest in her affairs, from financial matters to her personal life, and the change is certainly reflected in the jewelry she wore. She now preferred important diamond and precious gemstone jewelry from important jewelers. With her mother as an expert guide, she shopped at prominent jewelry maisons, such as Cartier and other establishments that catered to an elite clientele and offered only the finest gemstones and designs. In this photograph by Cecil Beaton, Doris Duke In the early part of the decade, Doris Duke’s taste was is wearing the pair of pearl bracelets (Fig. 22) on one wrist, influenced by her mother’s jewels, which featured the twoas was the custom in the early 1930s. dimensional, rectilinear art deco patterns of the 1920s. By the end of the 1920s, the all-white diamond look reigned supreme, and imaginative designs made it possible to convert one piece of jewelry into one or more different pieces. Within a few years, that style evolved into a bolder more sculptural look. In 1935, Doris Duke and her husband, James Cromwell, traveled extensively in the East on their honeymoon. This trip would have a major influence on her taste for the rest of her life. She became enchanted with India —its people, architecture, decorative arts, and jewelry. It would inspire her to build Shangri La, her magnificent home in Hawaii, and to begin collecting the arts of the East. It was also at this time that her Western jewelry choices began to favor those with Eastern influences. This new direction signaled her independence, her beginning to assert herself as her own person. No longer under the direct influence of her mother’s taste, from then on she would buy only what she liked. Doris Duke, like many of her contemporaries of similar social and financial position, was surrounded by fine things and wore the latest fashions. Whereas many of her peers owned objects for status rather than artistic value, Doris Duke chose to surround herself with articles of artistic importance, from porcelains, glass, oriental carpets, and furniture to her jewelry. Her upbringing and resources enabled her to develop a more refined taste than most. She trained her “eye” to distinguish between what was good and what was mediocre. This is perhaps nowhere more evident than in her collection of jewelry. 46 Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1930s 31. Emerald bead necklace c. 1935 Emerald beads, cabochon emerald, diamonds, silver, gold Approximate weight of beads: 120.00 carats Although mined in Colombia, emeralds have a history with India; they were the stones favored by the maharajahs, who only wanted the best. 47 An Independent Woman: 48 32. Double strand emerald bead necklace c. 1935 Emerald beads, cabochon emerald, diamonds, silver, gold Approximate weight of beads: 280.00 carats To find one strand of emerald beads of high quality is rare; to find two such strands is remarkable. Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1930s 33. Cabochon emerald, pearl, and diamond clip brooch Cartier, New York, no. 54/52481 1934 Cabochon emeralds, diamonds, pearls, gold, platinum H: 2 ⁷/₁₆ inches On December 31, 1934, Doris Duke purchased a bracelet at Cartier. On January 11, 1935, she had Cartier convert it to a plaque brooch. In 1954, she asked Cartier to alter it, yet again, to a double-clip pin. 34. Cabochon emerald, pearl, and diamond bracelet Cartier, New York, no. 2717519 1934 Cabochon emeralds, diamonds, pearls, gold, platinum L: 6 1⁄2 inches This bracelet was purchased by Doris Duke at Cartier, New York, on December 31, 1934. On January 11, 1935, the following work was done: “Mounting diamond motif as a bracelet, supplying pearls. Credit for pearls & clasp.” 49 An Independent Woman: 50 35. Pair of diamond bracelets convertible to choker necklace Cartier, New York, no. 3410 c. 1930 Diamonds, platinum Length of one bracelet: 6 3⁄4 inches Length of one bracelet: 7 1⁄4 inches Length of choker: 13 1⁄4 inches Unlike her mother who loved large diamonds, Doris Duke seems to have focused more on the design of her jewelry. On these bracelets, the diamonds, while lavish, are subordinate to the severe, ice-like geometric design. Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1930s 36. Pair of diamond clip brooches with double-clip fitting Flato, New York 1942 Diamonds, gold, platinum H: 2 inches W: 3 1⁄2 inches Doris Duke purchased the clip brooches from Paul Flato on July 13, 1942, for $10,000. They show the increasing flamboyance of the early 1940s and a rejection of the stark geometry of the art deco style. 37. Pair of diamond clip brooches with gold bangle fitting Cartier, New York 1930 Diamonds, platinum, gold Width of clip brooch: 2 1⁄2 inches On December 23, 1930, Nanaline Duke purchased the clip brooches with the gold bangle fitting from Cartier. There is evidence that later Nanaline may have given this piece as a wedding gift to Doris Duke when she married James Cromwell. 51 An Independent Woman: 38. Pair of diamond chandelier ear pendants Cartier, New York 1937 Briolette diamonds, diamonds, platinum H: 1 3⁄8 inches Approximate weight of briolette diamonds: 12.00 carats. Doris Duke purchased the ear pendants from Cartier, New York, on April 30, 1937, for $4,950. 39. Pearl and diamond ear clips Flato, New York Pearls, diamonds, platinum D: 3⁄4 inches On January 2, 1940, Flato assembled the ear clips for Doris Duke Cromwell, noting, “Remounting your pearls and round diamonds and supplying necessary diamonds and pearls as a pair of platinum mounted ear clips.” 40. Pair of diamond hair slides Cartier, New York 1937 Diamonds, platinum L: 2 inches Like several of her pieces, these hair slides were converted from one form to another. On April 30, 1937, Doris Duke purchased a clip brooch/hair barrette from Cartier, New York, for $1,900. At a later date, she had it changed into hair slides. 52 Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1930s 41. Lapis and gem-set vanity case Cartier, New York no. 1479 1937 Lapis lazuli, emeralds, rubies, sapphires, enamel, gold W: 2 inches L: 3 1⁄2 inches The nécessaire, or vanity case, became a standard feminine accessory of the 1920s and 1930s, often embellished with Eastern motifs. The decoration on this vanity case with the central enamel decoration is reminiscent of Persian carpets. Doris Duke purchased it from Cartier, New York, on April 13, 1937, for $2,500. 53 An Independent Woman: 42. Diamond and rock crystal Taj Mahal clip brooch c. 1935 Diamond, sapphires, black onyx, rock crystal, platinum, white metal H: 1 1⁄8 inches When Doris Duke and James Cromwell went on their honeymoon to India, they traveled to Agra to see the Taj Mahal. It was reported that when she saw the Mogul temple, she said, “I want one of those.” Perhaps this brooch is a remembrance of their journey. 43. Diamond “junk” brooch c. 1940 Diamonds, sapphires, ruby, platinum H: 1 3⁄8 inches Although glamorous in their own right, such little jewels as these were most likely of personal importance to Doris Duke. 54 a woman of substance Doris Duke’s jewelry from the 1940s onward A Woman of Substance: Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1940s Onward The next milestone in Doris Duke’s life occurred in 1943. The divorce from James Cromwell freed her from the dominating influence of her middle-aged husband. She took full command of her own life. Her net worth was estimated to be more than $300 million. She could buy just about anything she desired. While she did, in fact, spend money on homes and a lavish lifestyle, it was done with class, taste, and knowledge of value. In her jewelry purchases, she chose pieces that were tasteful and harmonized with her lifestyle. Since she already had diamond-set jewels, Doris Duke is wearing the hair slides (Fig. 40) her attention turned to jewelry she could wear during the day or into the and pearl and diamond bracelet (Fig. 29 ) by Cartier evening for dinner. and the snowflake ear clips (Fig. 66 ) by Van Cleef & Miss Duke frequented the smaller jewelry salons in New York City Arpels in this photograph by Wallace Seawell. of Paul Flato, Fulco di Verdura, and Seaman Schepps, designers who were at the “cutting edge,” creating a new aesthetic in jewelry design. These designers maintained small salons and dealt directly with clients, creating special, one-of-a-kind pieces. She would often have them make new pieces of jewelry from gemstones that she purchased on her travels or that she had extracted from out-dated pieces. Into Verdura she would go with a parcel of stones to have made into something exciting, something different. From the 1940s onward, Miss Duke’s taste turned to interesting, unusual jewelry. For example, at Van Cleef & Arpels, instead of diamond-set brooches or bracelets, she chose a suite with rubies, sapphires, and diamonds with “Hawaii” flowers; her love of the island is reflected in this purchase (Fig. 73). By the 1960s, she was a regular client at David Webb in New York City, selecting jewelry often inspired by the East. Color contrasts characterize her jewelry from this period. Her jewelry choices became large in scale and were bought in suites. Earrings were not the small pieces from the 1930s or 1940s that hugged the earlobes; instead they were long and dangling ear pendants. She wore her blonde hair long, slightly pushed back to accentuate her beautiful ear accoutrements. That Doris Duke loved jewelry is evident from even a casual examination of her vast collection. She continued to buy jewels until the end of her life. In 1991, just two years before she died, she bought the Cartier emerald bead ear clips at auction (Fig. 64). It is fitting that one of her last jewelry purchases is a piece by a maker that both she and her mother had patronized regularly many years before. 56 Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1940s Onward 44. Turquoise, sapphire, and diamond bracelet David Webb, New York 1965 Turquoise, sapphires, diamonds, gold, platinum L: 7 inches Doris Duke purchased this bracelet from David Webb on May 8, 1965, the same day she bought a coordinating necklace (Fig.46). The bracelet was valued at $7,700, but she was given a “special price” of $6,000. 45. Pair of sapphire, turquoise, and diamond ear clips David Webb, New York 1969 Turquoise, sapphires, diamonds, platinum H: 2 inches These earrings show a strong influence of Indian jewelry, reflecting Doris Duke’s passionate interest in Mogul forms at this stage of her life. Most of the stones for these ear clips were supplied by Doris Duke with additional stones from David Webb’s stock. 46. Turquoise, sapphire, and diamond fringe necklace David Webb, New York 1965 Turquoise, sapphires, diamonds, gold, platinum This necklace was assembled by David Webb with stones Doris Duke owned as well as others to complete the design. She may have disassembled one of her mother’s sapphire pieces, inherited in 1962, or something of her own. The records indicate she purchased it, along with a coordinating bracelet (Fig.44) on May 8, 1965. 57 A Woman of Substance: 47. Emerald-bead two-strand necklace David Webb, New York 1969 Emerald beads, diamonds, gold This necklace was assembled by David Webb with emerald beads Doris Duke owned. He created the clasp and spacers with diamonds. 48. Pair of emerald-bead drops David Webb, New York 1957 Emerald beads, diamonds, platinum H: 1 1⁄4 inches On November 30, 1957, Doris Duke purchased from David Webb the emerald bead drops along with the diamond-set scroll ear clips (Fig. 56 ) from which to hang them (illustrated below as a combined piece). 58 Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1940s Onward 49. Pink topaz and diamond “flower twist” suite consisting of necklace, bracelet, and ear clips Verdura, Inc., New York 1966 Precious pink topaz, diamonds, gold, platinum Height of ear clips: 1 5⁄8 inches When viewed in the context of Doris Duke’s other jewelry, this suite with pink topaz is atypical of her jewelry, which is usually set with darker hued gemstones. She purchased this suite from Verdura for $27,500 on March 1, 1966. 59 A Woman of Substance: 60 50. Citrine and gold crossover necklace Verdura, New York 1940 Citrines, gold Before opening his own salon in 1939, Fulco di Verdura worked for Paul Flato, whose noted creations include a vine crossover necklace. Perhaps that necklace inspired Verdura when he created this design. This necklace was assembled by him with twenty-seven citrines from Doris Duke’s collection and twenty-four that he supplied. On May 29, 1940, she paid $800 for it. Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1940s Onward 51. Pair of ruby bead drops David Webb, New York 1969 Ruby beads, diamonds, gold H: 1 1⁄4 inches Doris Duke purchased the ruby bead drops along with a ruby bead fringe necklace (Fig.52 ) from David Webb on October 10, 1969. 52. Ruby bead and cultured pearl fringe necklace David Webb, New York 1969 Ruby beads, cultured pearls, gold A remarkable example of Doris Duke’s recycling of old jewelry, this Indian-style fringe necklace was assembled by David Webb from three single-strand strings of pearls, consisting of 37, 49, and 53 pearls each, supplied by Doris Duke. She also provided Webb with 14 loose pearls and 1,136 ruby beads. She paid for this necklace and a pair of ruby bead drops (Fig.51) on October 10, 1969. 61 A Woman of Substance: 53. A graduated opal bead necklace David Webb, New York 1969 Opal beads, crystal rondels, diamonds, gold, platinum Using her own stones, Doris Duke ordered this opal bead necklace and the matching earrings from David Webb. It was purchased on October 10, 1969. The art deco style clasp was probably a readaption of another piece of jewelry. 54. Pair of opal and crystal ear pendants David Webb, New York Opals, crystal, gold H: 2 1⁄4 inches 62 Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1940s Onward 55. Diamond tassel clip brooch David Webb, New York 1957 Diamonds, platinum H: 2 5⁄8 inches Approximate weight of large pear-shaped diamond: 9.67 carats; of small pear-shaped diamond: 3.65 carats; of marquise-cut diamond: 5.00 carats; of baguette-cut diamond: 2.50 carats; of circular-cut diamond: 11.00 carats. This splendid brooch was assembled by David Webb from a bracelet with a pear-shaped diamond that was given to Doris Duke by her mother in December 1949. The largest stone had been a gift from James B. Duke to his wife. In 1957, Miss Duke had David Webb remake it into this brooch. 56. Pair of diamond scroll earrings David Webb, New York Diamonds, platinum H: 1 1⁄8 inches The earrings were originally made to accompany the emerald bead drops (Fig. 48 ) and were purchased on November 30, 1957. 57. Cushion-cut sapphire ring American c. 1950 Sapphire, diamonds, platinum 63 A Woman of Substance: 58. Carved sapphire, ruby, and diamond bracelet Van Cleef & Arpels, Paris, no. 3744 c. 1945 Sapphires, rubies, diamonds, gold Length with tassel: 9 inches 59. Gold powder compact Rubies, gold c. 1955 W: 2 1⁄8 inches L: 3 ³⁄₁₆ inches 64 Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1940s Onward 60. Cabochon sapphire bunch of grapes clip brooch Seaman Schepps, New York 1941 Cabochon sapphires, emeralds, diamonds, gold, platinum H: 3 1⁄2 inches The revived naturalism of the 1940s is exemplified in this sculptural brooch. Doris Duke purchased it from Seaman Schepps for $2,500 on June 10, 1941. 62. Cabochon sapphire, diamond, and gem-set bracelet Seaman Schepps, New York c. 1937 Cabochon sapphires, rubies, emeralds, diamonds, gold, platinum L: 7 3⁄8 inches Doris Duke had Seaman Schepps alter the buckle of this bracelet in 1952. 61. Pair of cabochon sapphire and diamond ear clips Seaman Schepps, New York 1955 Cabochon sapphires, diamonds, gold, platinum Doris Duke purchased these ear clips from Seaman Schepps on December 1, 1955. 65 A Woman of Substance: 66 63. Gem-set vanity case Verdura, New York 1940 Brown, green, and yellow tourmalines, citrines, beryl, gold W: 2 3⁄8 inches L: 3 3⁄4 inches Doris Duke purchased the vanity case from Verdura, Inc., on December 16, 1940. She then had the olivines in the original case unset and a new gold case cover added, then mounted the special jeweled outer case. The original case cost $1,250, and the cost of the work was $2,950, so the total cost was $4,495 with tax. Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1940s Onward 64. Pair of emerald bead ear clips Cartier, Paris no. r8427 c. 1967 Emeralds, emerald beads, gold H: 1 7⁄8 inches On June 8, 1967, a special order was placed at Cartier, Paris, for the earclips which were originally designed with diamonds along the edge and middle vein and the leaf itself with emeralds. On May 12, 1976, the client replaced the diamonds with 100 emeralds. These ear clips were then sold at auction at Sotheby’s, New York, on June 12, 1991, lot no. 283, where Doris Duke bought them for $99,000. 65. Graduated, single row, jade bead necklace c. 1950 Jade beads, jade, gold L: 16 1⁄2 inches Approximate diameter of beads: 12.8 to 12.9 mm. 67 A Woman of Substance: 66. Pair of diamond snowflake ear clips Van Cleef & Arpels, New York, no. 56611 1946 Diamonds, platinum D: 1 1⁄4 inches During the 1940s,Van Cleef & Arpels introduced new jewelry forms based on everyday items such as the pocket handkerchief and, in 1946, the snowflake. Doris Duke purchased ear clips in this form in diamonds. 67. Pair of aquamarine and diamond scroll ear clips Van Cleef & Arpels, Paris c. 1945 Aquamarines, diamonds, platinum H: 1 inch 68. Diamond and yellow gold choker c. 1950 Diamonds, gold, platinum L: 17 1⁄4 inches Doris Duke wore this necklace at her wedding to Porfirio Rubirosa on September 1, 1947. 68 Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1940s Onward 69. Pair of diamond and pearl ear pendants David Webb, Inc., New York c. 1960 Cultured pearls, baroque pearls, diamonds, platinum H: 3 1⁄2 inches Like much of Doris Duke’s jewelry from David Webb, these large-scale ear pendants show strong Indian influence. The large size is characteristic of jewelry from the 1960s. 69 A Woman of Substance: 70. Turquoise, freshwater pearl, and diamond Indian head brooch Verdura, Inc., New York 1957 Turquoise, freshwater pearl, diamonds, gold, platinum H: 1 1⁄2 inches The Indian on the reverse of the five-cent piece was the inspiration for this brooch. An irregular baroque pearl forms the headdress. 71. Diamond and gold feather brooch c. 1945 Diamonds, gold, platinum H: 4 1⁄4 inches 72. Pair of diamond and pearl fluted ear clips Flato, New York 1939 Diamonds, pearls, gold L: 1 3⁄4 inches Doris Duke purchased these ear clips from Paul Flato on December 23, 1939. 70 Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1940s Onward 73. Suite of “Hawaii” flower jewelry comprising bracelet, ear clips and ring Van Cleef & Arpels, Paris, no. 50031 1947 Sapphires, rubies, diamonds, gold Height of ear clips: 1 3⁄4 inches Length of bracelet: 6 1⁄2 inches In the 1940s,Van Cleef & Arpels created many different types of jewelry with floral motifs. One such design was set with “Hawaii” flowers, ruby and sapphire flowers with diamond centers. The sapphire flower for the bracelet was bought on December 23, 1947, for $6,500. 74. Ruby, sapphire and diamond clip brooch c. 1947 Sapphires, rubies, diamonds, gold H: 2 1⁄4 inches 71 A Woman of Substance: 72 75. Ivory, pearl, and diamond chess piece brooch Verdura, Inc., New York 1940 Ivory, rubies, pearls, diamonds, gold H: 3 1⁄4 inches This chess piece is one of a large series of these brooches that Fulco di Verdura made from an eighteenth-century set of painted ivory chessmen from India. Inspired by Johann Melchior Dinglinger’s The Court of the Grand Moghul, a group of elaborate gem-set figures at the Green Vaults in Dresden,Verdura dressed the figures in gold, gemstones, and pearls. They were purchased by many prominent leaders of society including Mrs. William H. Harkness and Mrs. Jules Stein, and on May 25, 1940, Doris Duke bought one for $400. Doris Duke’s Jewelry from the 1940s Onward 76. Gold, curb-link charm bracelet Gold, diamonds, turquoise L: 7 inches Four charms comprising a gold and diamond St. Christopher medal by Cartier, a folded one-dollar bill, a turquoise and diamond heart, and a “chick” locket This charm bracelet is the type that any woman of the period might have worn and is probably typical of the personal jewelry that Doris Duke wore with sport attire. 77. Two-color, gold charm bracelet Gold L: 7 inches Four swimming medallions awarded to Sam Kahanamoku This bracelet was given to Doris Duke by her friend, Sam Kahanamoku. The reverse of one of the medals is inscribed, “To Lahilahi from Meleana June 13, 1944.” Lahilahi was Miss Duke’s nickname in Hawaii. 78. Ruby and pearl watch bracelet On dial: Verdura c. 1945 Rubies, pearls, gold, cord; reverse with polychrome enamel L: 6 inches Although the dial on this watch is signed Verdura, it is not known whether he actually made the bracelet or if it was a band that he acquired in India and then set a watch into it. Because of its Indian design, it would appeal to Doris Duke. 73 A Woman of Substance: 74 79. Diamond and platinum necklace mount Cartier, New York 1937 Diamonds, platinum This necklace mount is a particularly vivid reminder of how Doris Duke continually recycled stones from her jewelry as she refashioned her collection over the years. She purchased an important diamond necklace from Cartier, New York, on April 30, 1937, for $65,000. Over the years, she unmounted many of the diamonds, setting them in other pieces of jewelry. east meets west 75 East Meets West: Doris Duke’s Indian/Southeast Asian Jewelry On her first trip to India during her year-long honeymoon, Doris Duke must have been entranced by the decorative arts and architecture she saw, little of which would have been familiar to Americans of that era. There were a few Indian philosophers and artists who had traveled in America, such as Uday Shankar (the older brother of Ravi Shankar), who made a well-publicized Doris Duke wearing the diamond, pearl, and sapphire tour with his musicians and dancers in the early 1930s, but Indian necklace (Fig. 88). Photograph by George Hurrell. India and its culture were still quite mysterious to most people in this country. At that time, the princely states in pre-independence India were still supporting thousands of craftsmen as they had for hundreds of years. Work in metal and stone, textiles, and, above all, jewelry, was exquisite. Indian jewelry, like other Indian decorative arts, leaves no surface unadorned; any part of the body that can support decoration receives it. The country’s long tradition of jewelry comes from a combination of factors: availability of gemstones, vast wealth accumulated from the trade in spices and textiles, and a large pool of skilled craftspeople. Until diamonds were discovered in Brazil in 1725, India had a world monopoly on diamonds, all mined in the old kingdom of Golconda. Rubies were imported from Burma (now Myanmar), sapphires from Sri Lanka (until a source of good sapphires was discovered in Kashmir in 1880, now completely mined out), and emeralds from Colombia. Pearls came from the Persian Gulf and Sri Lanka. Lesser gemstones were available in plentiful supply as well. While in India, Doris Duke and her husband would have met upper-class British Colonial officers and their wives and the most Westernized and wealthy of the (male) Indian elite, those who fraternized with their British counterparts.Very few Indian women would have been comfortable in such company, so it is doubtful that Doris Duke gained much direct knowledge of Indian jewelry until later. She did develop a passion for Mogul architecture on that first trip, which eventually became the raison d’être of her house in Hawaii, Shangri La. Because she was such a tall and striking woman, Doris Duke could wear jewelry that would have overwhelmed someone more petite. Once she did start collecting Indian jewelry, she chose spectacular pieces that she could wear with the more flamboyant clothes of the era. She also developed a taste for the somewhat more delicate and refined jewelry from Southeast Asia, primarily Thailand. The Indian and Southeast Asian ornaments in this exhibition will serve to illustrate her discerning eye for the exuberant but beautifully crafted adornments that would suit her as well as it suited their original owners. 76 Doris Duke’s Indian/Southeast Asian Jewelry 80. Diamond pendant necklace India Diamonds, platinum Doris Duke purchased a necklace (illustrated in photo below) at auction at the Parke-Bernet Galleries’ sale, “Important Jewelry Collection of Madame Ganna Walska,” lot no. 80, on April 1, 1971, for $62,500. The original necklace consisted of five pendant elements, each section set with two triangular-shaped diamonds. At that sale, she also purchased lot no. 81, a diamond pendant clip, and lot no. 82, diamond pendant earrings. These two pieces were probably added to the necklace to create the chandelier-style pendant hanging from the center diamond. 77 East Meets West: 78 81. Champa-Kali ruby and diamond cluster bracelet India Late 17th and early 18th century Rubies, diamonds, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel W: 4 1⁄2 inches L: 9 inches This bracelet was probably part of a set with a coordinating necklace with similar ruby-set floral units from which pendant pearl elements are suspended. Doris Duke purchased this bracelet at the Parke-Bernet Galleries’ sale, “Important Jewelry Collection of Madame Ganna Walska,” lot no. 104, on April 1, 1971, for $3,250. Doris Duke’s Indian/Southeast Asian Jewelry 82. Pair of diamond, ruby, and enamel rigid gold bangles Jaipur c. 1900 Rubies and diamonds in kundan settings, enamel, gold; inside with polychrome enamel 83. Pair of ruby, diamond, and enamel rigid gold bangles Jaipur Early 20th century Rubies and diamonds in kundan settings, enamel, gold; inside with polychrome enamel 84. Pair of ruby, diamond, seed pearl, and enamel rigid gold bangles Jaipur Late 18th or early 19th century Rubies and diamonds in kundan settings, seed pearls, enamel, gold; inside with polychrome enamel This type of rigid, enameled bangle, with or without gemstones, continues to be an extremely popular style in India and one that is most easily worn by Westerners as well. The practice of enameling the unseen reverse side of Jaipur-style jewelry is partly to preserve the original gold content of the bangle as well as to increase the rigidity of the bangle. 79 East Meets West: 80 85. Pair of diamond and enamel armlets Jaipur 19th century Diamonds, gold, silk and metal-thread cord; reverse with polychrome enamel L: 7 inches Variations of flexible armlets, called bazuband, appear in Indian folk jewelry and have been extensively copied by Western jewelry designers. A diamond and gold version was made by René Boivin in 1950. Doris Duke’s Indian/Southeast Asian Jewelry 86. Enameled and inset gold necklace Jaipur Early 20th century Seed pearls, rubies, diamonds, red glass beads, silk and metal-thread cord; reverse with polychrome enamel 87. Ruby, diamond, and gold necklace India Late 19th or early 20th century Cabochon rubies, diamonds, gold, silk cord; reverse with polychrome enamel 81 East Meets West: 82 88. Diamond, pearl, and sapphire gold necklace Jaipur 19th century Diamonds, sapphire beads, pearls, seed pearls, blue glass beads, enamel, gold, silk cord; reverse with polychrome enamel Doris Duke’s Indian/Southeast Asian Jewelry 89. Diamond, gem-set, and pearl gold arya necklace Bikaner 19th century Diamonds in kundan settings, sapphires, emeralds, rubies, seed pearls, gold, silk cord; reverse with polychrome enamel Arya necklaces, extremely complex examples of the goldsmith’s art, are often worn attached to the neck by multiple strings of glass seed beads and silk tassels. Doris Duke purchased this necklace at the Parke-Bernet Galleries’ sale “The Important Jewelry Collection of Madame Ganna Walska,” lot no. 102 on April 1, 1971, for $2,600. 83 East Meets West: 84 90. Carved emerald and diamond gold pendant India 18th century, setting early 19th century W: 2 3⁄4 inches Carved emerald in hexagonal (shashpahlu) form, emerald beads, diamonds in kundan setting, pearls, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel The hexagonal form became a standard shape for Mogul emeralds because the actual crystal is shaped in that way. Beginning in the sixteenth century, lapidaries became skilled at engraving floral designs in low relief on these special stones. Doris Duke’s Indian/Southeast Asian Jewelry 91. Pair of seed pearl and glass bead gold ear ornaments India 19th or 20th century Seed pearls, glass beads, diamonds, enamel, gold, cord H: 6 3⁄4 inches These long ear ornaments are still an indispensable element in Indian bridal finery and are also used in dance costumes. They are worn firmly fastened to the hair or to other jewelry for security as well as to reduce the weight on the ear. 92. White sapphire, ruby, seed pearl, and gold bale jhabbedar ear ornaments Delhi 19th century White sapphires, rubies, seed pearls, emerald beads, enamel, gold, cord H: 9 1⁄2 inches An ornamental chain with a hook for attachment to the hair supports the bale jhabbedar earrings. This design dates to the Mogul period. 85 East Meets West: 86 93.Gem-set and enamel gold armlet Jaipur 20th century Colored gemstones and rubies in kundan settings, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel L: 7 inches The stones on this armlet are set in the classical Hindu navaratna (nine gemstones) arrangement, a powerful amulet symbolizing the power of the sun and all the planets in relation to the universe. It was believed that such an armlet would allow the wearer to “manipulate celestial forces for personal benefit.” 94. Diamond, gem-set, and enamel gold flexible bracelet Jaipur Late 19th century Diamonds, foil-backed corundums, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel L: 7 inches Doris Duke’s Indian/Southeast Asian Jewelry 95. Pair of gem-set gold hand ornaments (hathphul) with finger rings (panchangala) Jaipur 19th century Emeralds, diamonds, rubies, gold, silver, cord L: 5 1⁄4 inches The hand ornament or hathphul is a traditional wedding jewel based on a lotus flower. It is worn on the back of the hand, secured by a bracelet and four finger rings and is hinged at many points for flexibility. 87 East Meets West: 96. Pair of diamond and enamel gold “lotus” bracelets Probably Hyderabad Late 18th century Diamonds, gold, cord; reverse with polychrome enamel Length of one: 6 1⁄4 inches 97. Pair of beryl, enamel, and gold “guard” bangles Rajasthan Late 19th century Enamel, beryl, gold In northwestern India (Rajasthan and Gujerat), these large bangles are worn in pairs on each arm, above and below a set of smaller bangles or bracelets. 88 Doris Duke’s Indian/Southeast Asian Jewelry 98. Pair of seed pearl bracelets India Late 19th century Seed pearls, diamonds, enamel, metal-thread cord L: 6 inches The effect of gajre, granulated silver or gold balls, is emulated here with seed pearls. The oval or half-spherical form covered with real or imitation granulation is often used in Indian jewelry. 99. White sapphire and enamel gold belt Jaipur Late 19th century White sapphires, seed pearls, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel 89 East Meets West: 90 100. Ruby pendant necklace Madras, Tamil Nadu Late 19th or early 20th century Rubies, diamonds, emeralds, gold, cord Two stylized peacocks facing a center rosette form the upper part of two pendants. The rubies come from Myanmar (Burma), which has been known as a source of rubies to Europeans since the late-fifteenth century. 101. Diamond hair ornament (part of a jadanagam, braid ornament) Tamil Nadu Late 19th century Diamonds, emeralds, rubies W: 2 1⁄2 inches L: 3 inches This is the main part of a hair ornament traditionally worn by south Indian Hindu brides or by Bharata-natyam dancers. The missing upper part, fastened to the back of the head, would represent the sun, the new moon, and a fragrant flower (thazambhu). This section represents the nagaraja (literally, snake-king) and would be fastened at the nape of the neck. Attached to the bottom of this ornament would be a long, jeweled piece which would entirely cover a hair braid and end in three large silk tassels. Doris Duke’s Indian/Southeast Asian Jewelry 102. Diamond necklace Delhi Late 19th century Diamonds, pearl, ruby glass beads, gold; reverse with enamel 103. Pair of diamond pendants India Late 18th or early 19th century Diamonds, gold, enamel 91 East Meets West: 92 104. Pair of diamond gold chain-link anklets (jarao ka paizeb) Northern India Late 18th century Diamonds in kundan settings, enamel, gold; reverse in polychrome enamel Feet are as visible as hands in Indian traditional dress, and jewelry in the form of anklets and toe-rings is always worn. The foot is given additional decoration with mehndi (henna) designs. 105. Diamond gold buckle Southeast Asia Diamonds, gold W: 3 inches H: 2 1⁄4 inches 106. Diamond gold buckle Southeast Asia Diamonds, gold W: 4 inches H: 3 1⁄4 inches This buckle with its refined, delicate goldwork and small diamonds is very different in character to the kind of work in such pieces as the gold belt from Jaipur in Figure 99. Doris Duke’s Indian/Southeast Asian Jewelry 107. Enameled and gold cigarette holder Jaipur 20th century Enamel, gold L: 2 3⁄8 inches This cigarette holder is a charming novelty item, one that was probably made for the Western market. 108. Silver gilt and synthetic ruby armlet Thai Synthetic rubies, silver gilt L: 10 1⁄2 inches 93 East Meets West: 109. Silver gilt and synthetic ruby fringe necklace Southeast Asia 20th century Synthetic rubies, silver gilt 110. Bib necklace India White zircons, enameled miniatures, base metal, silk cord; reverse with polychrome enamel This necklace of small, enameled religious paintings is decorative but also has apotropaic qualities to protect the wearer. It is a more elaborate version of the amulet necklace commonly worn by Hindus to show devotion to a particular god or goddess. 94 Catalog of Un-exhibited Jewelry and Objects Throughout her life, Doris Duke collected jewelry and small decorative objects. Her acquisitions covered a wide range of artistic and intrinsically valuable pieces, from carefully selected, elaborate jewels set with diamonds and precious stones at the vanguard of designs, styles, and techniques to unassuming jewels she purchased to wear in a casual way or to complement particular outfits. If something caught her eye, she just bought it. The preceding material in this catalog discusses and illustrates those pieces judged by the authors as the most important in the Doris Duke collection. The following illustrated listing of jewelry and objects comprise the extant remainder of her collection. While it includes representations from major jewelry houses such as Cartier, Tiffany & Co., Paul Flato, Seaman Schepps, and Van Cleef & Arpels, as well as objects from Gucci and Bulgari, a significant portion consists of unmarked jewelry from other American makers as well as figural brooches of animals, birds, and flowers, an assortment of rings, some with the stones removed, bead necklaces, and groups of loose gemstones that she probably intended to have made into jewelry. Similarly, when she traveled to India and Southeast Asia, Doris Duke frequently purchased jewelry from the area, not only major pieces but often simpler jewelry she found attractive or representative of a particular region. Looking at this part of her collection, one discerns certain patterns. Enameled rigid bangles seemed to be favorite choices, most likely because they were so easy to wear and colorful. She had a penchant for long, dangling ear pendants, probably to take advantage of her tall stature. She also collected enameled buttons suitable for sewing on her garments. It is clear that, regardless of the monetary value, Doris Duke chose consistently, guided by a well-defined aesthetic, relying on her unerring eye to identify her selections. She thus imprinted something of herself onto even the humblest pieces she acquired. We can be grateful she did. 96 116. Guard ring American Diamonds, platinum From the wear on this ring, it was probably Nanaline Duke’s guard ring. 111. and 112. Dress set and scarf pin Dress set American, c. 1900 Mother-of-pearl, diamonds, gold Scarf pin English, c. 1900 Sapphire, diamonds, gold L: 2 3⁄8 inches On April 11, 1955, a notation in the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation archives: “…diamond & sapphire stick pin (500) from Mrs. Duke to DD.” Upon her mother’s death in 1962, Doris Duke inherited a “sapphire and diamond stick pin-6 round diamonds (old mine, off color).” 117. Two coins 113. Collection of ten gold coins Comprising one ten-dollar piece, two sovereigns, one Egyptian, four fivedollar pieces, a one-dollar piece, and a twenty-franc piece 118. Gold and enamel box Swiss, Late 19th century Gold, cloisonné enamel L: 3 1⁄2 inches 114. Seed pearl demi-parure Comprising brooch and earrings American, c. 1880 Seed pearls, foil-backed gemstones, mother-of-pearl, string 119. Group of miscellaneous jewelry Comprising a lapis lazuli heart pendant on gold chain, a white jade and oriental character pendant, a gold three coin ring, an opal and gold baby ring, one jade frog earscrew, a freshwater pearl and beryl charm necklace, an amethyst and silver swizzle stick. 115. Group of four rings American, c. 1960s One with gold, diamonds One with coral, diamonds, gold One with coral, diamonds, gold, platinum One with gold, diamond 120. Open-face gold pocketwatch Hamilton Watch Co., Lancaster, Pennsylvania, c. 1910 Gold, steel H: 2 1⁄2 inches On case, monogram “WIP” for Walker Patterson Inman 97 121. Carved opal and diamond pansy brooch American, c. 1895 Carved opal, diamonds, gold H: 1 1⁄2 inches 126. Fob watch/brooch c. 1935 Silver, stainless steel, leather L: 2 1⁄2 inches 122. Diamond and enamel forget-me-not brooch American, c. 1895 Enamel, diamonds, gold H: 1 1⁄2 inches 127. Sapphire, ruby, and diamond torsade necklace American, c. 1960 Cabochon sapphire beads, cabochon sapphires, cabochon rubies, gold, platinum 123. Opal and diamond floral bangle American c. 1895 Gold, opal, diamonds, enamel 128. Two opal and gold rings and a pair of earrings American, c. 1960 Opals, gold 124. Two rings c. 1935 One with diamonds set in platinum by Cartier One with rubies set in platinum, unmarked 129. Sapphire and diamond ring American, c. 1960 Sapphire, diamonds, gold, platinum Approximate weight of sapphire: 5.60 carats 125. Diamond and sapphire tassel pendant c. 1905 Diamonds, sapphires, platinum L: 1 3⁄4 inches 130. Diamond wristwatch Le Coultre, Geneva, c. 1950-55 Diamonds, platinum, steel, glass L: 7 inches Doris Duke purchased this wristwatch at Parke-Bernet Galleries in New York on November 20, 1969, for $7,000. 98 131. Emerald and diamond ring Tiffany & Co., New York, c. 1920 Emerald, diamonds, platinum Doris Duke may have worn this ring as a young girl. 136. Cultured pearl and diamond gold bangle c. 1970 South Sea golden pearls measuring approximately 12.00 x 14.00 mm, diamonds, white and yellow gold, platinum 132. Jade ring Jade, gold 137. Seed pearl necklace with gem-set clasps American c. 1960 Seed pearls, diamonds, cabochon rubies and sapphires, gold. 133. Two gold bracelets One with gold ball set with colored gemstone One with gold ball set with turquoise 138. Pair of diamond and wirework hoop earrings Sterlé, Paris, no. 3318, c. 1960 Diamonds, gold H: 1 3⁄4 inches 134. Sapphire bead single strand necklace Seaman Schepps, New York, 1955 Sapphire beads, cabochon sapphires, gold L: 16 1⁄2 inches Doris Duke purchased this necklace from Seaman Schepps on December 1, 1955. 139. Multistrand chalcedony bead and simulated ruby bead bracelet Flato, New York, 1940 Chalcedony beads, simulated ruby beads, diamonds, gold L: 8 1⁄4 inches Doris Duke purchased this bracelet from Paul Flato on January 2, 1940. 135. Cultured pearl and diamond flower brooch c. 1970 South Sea golden pearl, diamonds, white and yellow gold. South Sea golden pearl measuring approximately 14.50 mm. H: 1 3⁄4 inches 140. Group of gemstones Comprising thirteen emerald-cut aquamarines 99 141. Group of diamonds Comprising one cushion-cut diamond, three circular-cut diamonds and twenty-three baguette-cut diamonds 146. Ring and bracelet set with topaz Seaman Schepps, New York, 1940 Topaz, gold Length of bracelet: 6 1⁄2 inches Doris Duke purchased the bracelet from Seaman Schepps on December 12, 1940. 142. Diamond and gold mesh evening purse American, c. 1950 Diamonds, woven gold L: 7 inches 147. Amethyst and gold brooch American, c. 1945 Amethysts, gold H: 1 3⁄8 inches 143. Sterling silver minaudiere Gucci, Italian, c. 1950 Sterling silver, black onyx L: 6 inches 148. Sapphire and diamond hair pin Cartier, Paris, New York Sapphires, diamonds, gold, platinum H: 1 1⁄2 inches 144. Turquoise, lapis lazuli, and diamond cluster brooch American, c. 1965 Turquoise, lapis lazuli, diamonds, gold D: 1 1⁄2 inches 149. Citrine ear pendants American c. 1950 H: 1 1⁄8 inches 145. Citrine gold flower brooch American, c. 1945 Citrines, gold H: 2 1⁄4 inches L: 4 1⁄4 inches 150. A tumbled semi-precious gem-set and gold necklace 100 151. Single strand pearl necklace Pearls, diamond 156. Group of gold, platinum, and diamond-set mounts Diamonds, emerald, gold, platinum 152. Sapphire and sterling silver cigarette case Marchak, Paris, c. 1940 Sapphires, sterling silver, gold L: 4 1⁄2 inches W: 3 1⁄4 inches 157. Pair of Spanish colonial emerald and gold pendants Emeralds, gold H: 2 ³⁄₁₆ inches 153. Sterling silver desk clock Bulgari, Italian Sterling silver, steel, glass; in fitted black leather case H: 3 1⁄2 inches 158. A gold pre-Columbian-style, double-head charm Gold 154. Foil-back topaz, chrysolite, and silver tree brooch Portuguese Foil back topaz, chrysolite, silver H: 4 3⁄8 inches 159. A group of loose stones Comprising five ruby beads, one oval opal, two oval-cut sapphires, two baguette-cut sapphires, one rectangular-cut emerald, one pearshaped ruby 155. Group of costume jewelry Comprising a peridot and metal branch brooch, a bangle, a blue bead ear pendant, a simulated sapphire, diamond rock crystal and white metal clip, a simulated diamond and yellow metal twin heart pin, a yellow metal rabbit compact signed Flato, a silver compact, a silver clip, a velvet purse, unmounted tumbled turquoise, unmounted opal, a coral bead, a yellow metal charm 160. Emerald and gold hair barrette Seaman Schepps, New York, 1954 Emeralds, gold L: 1 3⁄8 inches Doris Duke purchased the hair barrette from Seaman Schepps on July 1, 1954. 101 161. Ruby, opal, diamond, and gold flower cluster American Rubies, opals, diamonds, gold H: 1 1⁄2 inches 166. Pair of opal drop ear pendants American Opals, diamonds, enamel, gold H: 1 1⁄4 inches 162. Carved opal and diamond crab brooch American, c. 1960 Carved opal, diamonds, silver, gold H: 1 1⁄4 inches 167. Gold coin pendant on a chain Austrian gold coin mounted in a gold pendant suspended from a gold box chain 163. Cabochon ruby, cultured pearl, and gold “puppet” brooch Van Cleef & Arpels, New York, c. 1950 Gold, cabochon ruby, cultured pearls H: 2 inches 168. Pre-Columbian-style gold pendant/ brooch Gold, enamel, satin cord H: 1 7⁄8 inches 164. Carved ruby and diamond hummingbird pin American Carved cabochon rubies, diamonds, gold, platinum L: 1 1⁄8 inches 169. Gold-mounted lion’s claw pendant with chain Monet Lion’s claw, cabochon green glass, gold; chain-plated gold Height of pendant: 3 5⁄8 inches 165. Ruby, diamond, and gold elephant brooch American, c. 1960 Gold, diamonds, rubies L: 1 5⁄8 inches 170. Enamel bead with foliate design Foil-back cabochon emeralds, foilback cabochon rubies, enamel, gold H: 1 3⁄4 inches 102 171. Pair of diamond, ruby, and enamel rigid gold bangles Probably Lucknow, Late 19th century Rubies, diamonds in kundan settings, enamel, gold Doris Duke purchased the bangles at Parke-Bernet Galleries on May 15, 1969, for $700. 176. Pair of white sapphire and enameled gold earrings India, 19th century White sapphires, seed pearls, enamel, gold D: 2 1⁄4 inches 172. Pair of diamond, pearl, and enamel rigid gold bangles India, Late 17th or early 18th century Pearls, diamonds in kundan settings, enamel, gold; inside with polychrome enamel 177. Pair of white sapphire and enameled gold buttons Jaipur, Early 20th century White sapphires, enamel, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel W: ⁹⁄₁₆ inches 173. Diamonds, emeralds, rubies, and gold hair ornament Probably Jaipur, 20th century Emeralds, rubies, diamonds in kundan settings, pearls, enamel, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel W: 2 7⁄8 inches 178. Pair of white sapphire and enamel buttons Jaipur, Early 20th century White sapphires, enamel, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel W: ⁹⁄₁₆ inches 174. Pair of white sapphire, pearls, enamel, and gold earrings (Each originally a panel from a bracelet) Hyderabad or Jaipur, Late 18th century White sapphires, pearls, enamel, gold W: 1 ³⁄₁₆ inches 179. Set of four cabochon beryl and opal buttons Second half of 19th century Beryls, opals, silver D: 1 1⁄4 inches 175. Set of seven Navaratna buttons Jaipur, Late 19th century Chrysoberyl, coral, blister-pearl, diamonds, emeralds, colored glass, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel D: 3⁄4 inches 180. Set of white zircon buttons India, c. 1900 White zircons, gold 103 181. Set of red stone buttons India, c. 1900 Red stones, gold 186. Gem-set and enamel composite pendant Upper rosette section, early 18th century White sapphires, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel Lower section, early 19th century White sapphires, seed pearls, rubies, gold H: 4 7⁄8 inches L: 5 inches 182. Set of five gold buttons India, 20th century Emeralds, rubies, diamonds, gold 187. Pair of gem-set and enameled gold ear ornaments Jaipur, 20th century Colored gemstones, seed pearls, green glass beads, enamel, gold Doris Duke purchased the ear ornaments at Hammer Galleries, New York, on October 1, 1941 for $700. 183. Pair of gem-set and enamel rigid bangles Late 19th century Colored gemstones, pearls, enamel, gold 188. Pair of bracelets India, 19th century Beryl beads, cord L: 6 3⁄4 inches 184. Gem-set and enamel rigid bangle Jaipur, 20th century Beryl, corundum, white sapphires, enamel, gold; inside with polychrome enamel 189. Pair of diamond, seed pearl, and enamel earrings India, Early 20th century Diamonds, seed pearls, enamel, gold 185. Gem-set and enamel rigid bangle Jaipur, 20th century White sapphires, diamonds, rubies, enamel, gold; inside with polychrome enamel 190. Ruby and pearl shoulder ornament Early 20th century Cabochon rubies, pearls, gold L: 6 1⁄4 inches 104 191. Ruby and pearl earrings (en suite with ruby and pearl shoulder ornament) Early 20th century Cabochon rubies, pearls, gold W: 1 inch 196. Enameled pendant perfume flask in the form of a boteh Jaipur, Late 19th or early 20th century Enamel, diamonds, pearls, green glass beads, gold H: 1 1⁄8 inches 192. Uncut emerald, ruby, and seed pearl necklace Jaipur, Early 20th century Uncut emeralds and rubies, seed pearls, diamonds, enamel, gold 197. Diamond pendant necklace India, 19th century Diamonds, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel 193. Diamond and enamel bead necklace India, 20th century Diamonds, freshwater pearls, enamel, gold 198. Pair of ruby, white zircon, and enamel rigid bangles with bird terminals Jaipur, 20th century Rubies and white zircons in kundan settings, enamel, gold; inside with polychrome enamel 194. Gem-set necklace terminal panel India, Late 19th century Colored gemstones, gold 199. Ruby, white zircon, and enamel rigid bangle India, 20th century Rubies and white zircons in kundan settings, enamel, gold; inside with polychrome enamel 195. Diamond and white sapphire bead India Diamonds, white sapphires, rubies, gold H: 1 inch 200. White zircon, seed pearl, and enamel earrings India, 18th or 19th century White zircons, seed pearls, enamel, gold L: 2 1⁄2 inches 105 201. Diamond and pearl necklace India Diamonds, pearls, green glass beads, gold, cord; reverse with polychrome enamel Doris Duke purchased the necklace at Gazdar Private, Ltd., in Bombay on October 14, 1958. 206. Enamel pendant India, 18th century Gold, enamel, cord 202. Ruby and brass bracelet India, 20th century Cabochon rubies, seed pearls, brass L: 8 3⁄4 inches 207. Pearl, white zircon, and enamel ring India, 19th century White zircons, pearls, turquoise beads, enamel, gold 203. White zircon necklace India, Late 19th or early 20th century White zircons, seed pearls, green glass beads, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel 208. Freshwater pearl and gold bracelet Jaipur, Late 19th century Gold, diamonds, enamel, freshwater pearls 204. Diamond and enamel long chain necklace India, Early 20th century Diamonds, enamel, gold woven cord 209. Gem-set bracelet India, 20th century Rubies, sapphires, coral, cat’s eye, white and blue stones, enamel, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel L: 7 inches 205. Enamel fish necklace India, 20th century Diamonds, pearls, green glass beads, enamel, gold, cord 210. Gem-set rectangular panel India, 19th century Diamond, emerald, ruby, sapphire, coral, garnet, pearl, enamel, gold, black velvet band Doris Duke purchased the gemset panel from David Webb on November 30, 1957. She then had John Frederic make it into a belt. 106 211. Gem-set gold belt India Sapphire, white zircons, gold L: 32 inches 216. Gold serpent ring India Gold 212. Gem-set earrings India, 19th century Cabochon rubies, diamonds, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel 217. Three gem-set gold rings India, 20th century One with rubies, gold One with ruby, gold One with diamonds, gold 213. Pair of gem-set and gold earrings India, 19th century Originally a pair of buttons, later made into earrings by David Webb Diamonds, colored gemstones, enamel, gold 218. Pendant and long chain necklace India, 19th century Seed pearls, colored gemstones, enamel, gold 214. Pair of enamel ear clips India, 20th century Originally a pair of buttons, later made into earrings by David Webb White zircons, enamel, gold 219. Pair of diamond earrings India, 19th century Diamonds, gold, silver L: 2 3⁄8 inches (converted from a sarpech) 215. Three enamel and gold rings India Enamel, gold; one set with gemstones 220. Silver-gilt bracelet India Synthetic rubies, silver gilt L: 7 inches 107 221. Pair of silver-gilt foliate rigid bangles India, 20th century Silver gilt 226. Pair of white zircon and enamel gold bangles India, 19th century White zircons, enamel, gold, cord 222. Ruby and diamond gold bangle India Rubies, diamonds, gold 227. Pair of gem-set ear ornaments India, 20th century Rubies, white zircons, seed pearls, green glass beads, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel L: 4 1⁄4 inches 223. Two silver-gilt filigree bangles India, 20th century Silver gilt 228. Pair of gem-set ear ornaments India, 20th century Rubies, white zircons, seed pearls, red glass beads, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel H: 3 1⁄2 inches 224. Pair of ruby, emerald, diamond, and pearl rigid bangles India Rubies, emeralds, diamonds, pearls, gold 229.Pair of gem-set ear pendants Southern India, 20th century Enamel, rubies, emeralds, pearls, gold 225. Pair of emerald and diamond earrings India, 19th or 20th century Emeralds, diamonds, enamel, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel L: 3 inches Doris Duke purchased the earrings at Tula Ram, Jeweller, in Delhi on March 30, 1957. 230. Pair of ruby and emerald bracelets India, 19th century Rubies, emeralds, enamel, gold, velvet band L: 6 3⁄4 inches 108 231. Turquoise and gold bracelet India, 19th century Turquoise, gold, silk cord L: 7 inches 236. Pair of ruby and gold rigid bangles India, 20th century Rubies, gold; inside with polychrome enamel 232. Diamond and gold bracelet India, 19th or 20th century Diamonds, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel Length of central section: 4 1⁄2 inches 237. Pair of ruby and gold rigid bangles India, 19th or 20th century Rubies, diamonds, gold; inside with polychrome enamel 233. A set of three gold bracelets India, 20th century Gold L: 6 3⁄4 inches 238. Set of four white sapphire and enamel rigid bangles India, 19th or 20th century White sapphires, enamel, gold 234. Pair of diamond, gold, and green glass earrings India, 20th century Diamonds, green glass, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel 239. Diamond and enamel gold necklace India, 19th century Diamonds, seed pearls, enamel, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel 235. Pair of seed pearl and enamel ear pendants India, 20th century Diamonds, seed pearls, green glass beads, enamel, gold L: 2 inches 240. Pair of ruby bead and diamond flowerhead ear clips India, 20th century Ruby beads, diamonds, gold D: 1 inch Doris Duke purchased these ear clips from the Parke-Bernet Galleries’ sale, “Important Jewelry Collection of Madame Ganna Walska,” on April 1, 1971, for $200. 109 241. Diamond and ruby gold belt India, 19th or 20th century Diamonds, cabochon rubies, emeralds, gold; coil link band L: 27 inches Doris Duke purchased the belt from the Art Trading Company, New York, on July 11, 1941, for $450. 246. Carved emerald, ruby, diamond, and enamel pendant India, 18th century Carved emerald, diamonds, rubies, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel; silk cord H: 1 1⁄2 inches 242. Pearl and gem-set pendant and necklace India, 20th century Colored gemstones, seed pearls, enamel, gold, cord; reverse with polychrome enamel 247. Gold chimera bangle India, 20th century Gold 243. Gem-set earrings India, 20th century Colored gemstones, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel L: 3 1⁄2 inches 248. Emerald bead necklace India, 20th century Emerald beads, colored gemstones, pearls, enamel, gold 244. Diamond and seed pearl fringe necklace India Diamonds, pearls, seed pearls; reverse with polychrome enamel 249. Gem-set plaque link bracelet India, 20th century Colored gemstones, blue beads, seed pearls, gold L: 5 3⁄4 inches 245. Cabochon emerald, diamond and pearl pendant India, 19th century Foil-back emeralds, diamonds, baroque pearl, gold; reverse with polychrome enamel; woven gold chain H: 3 3⁄8 inches 250. Two gem-set and glass pendant brooches India, 20th century One with red and green glass, pearls, gold and attached to enameled bar pin signed by Seaman Schepps H: 3 inches One with red and green glass, pearls, rubies, gold H: 2 7⁄8 inches 110 251. Diamond and gold cluster ring Southeast Asia Diamonds, gold 256. Pair of red stone and silver-gilt tassel earrings Southeast Asia Red stone, silver gilt L: 3 inches 252. Gem-set silver-gilt belt Southeast Asia, 20th century Diamonds, colored gemstones, silver gilt, mesh band 257. White zircon and silvergilt brooch Southeast Asia 20th century White zircons, silver gilt D: 2 1⁄8 inches 253. White zircon silver-gilt belt Southeast Asia, 20th century White zircons, silver gilt, mesh band Length of buckle: 3 inches Length of belt: 29 inches 258. White zircon and silvergilt floral bracelet Southeast Asia, 20th century White zircons, silver gilt L: 7 inches 254. Silver-gilt belt Southeast Asia Silver gilt L: 27 1⁄4 inches 259. White zircon cluster clip Southeast Asia White zircons, silver gilt H: 3 inches 255. White zircon, silver-gilt link chain necklace Southeast Asia, 20th century White zircons, silver gilt L: 51 inches 260. White zircon cluster brooch Southeast Asia, 20th century White zircons, silver gilt D: 2 1⁄2 inches 111 261. White zircon armlet Southeast Asia, 20th century White zircons, silver gilt L: 10 3⁄4 inches 266. Synthetic ruby and silver-gilt long chain necklace Southeast Asia Synthetic rubies, silver gilt L: 49 inches 262. Pair of white zircon and silvergilt tassel earrings Southeast Asia, 20th century White zircons, silver gilt L: 3 inches 267. Synthetic ruby and silver-gilt wreath brooch Southeast Asia, 20th century Synthetic rubies, silver gilt D: 2 inches 263. White zircon and synthetic ruby bracelet Southeast Asia 20th century White zircons, synthetic rubies, silver gilt L: 6 1⁄4 inches 268. Synthetic ruby and silver-gilt foliate cluster bracelet Southeast Asia, 20th century Synthetic ruby, silver gilt L: 6 1⁄4 inches 264. White zircon and silver-gilt, cluster-fringe necklace Southeast Asia, 20th century White zircons, silver gilt 269. Synthetic ruby silver-gilt belt Southeast Asia, 20th century Synthetic rubies, silver gilt Length of buckle: 3 inches Length of belt: 31 1⁄2 inches 265. Diamond and gold pendant brooch Southeast Asia, 20th century Diamonds, gold, woven gold link neck chain D: 2 1⁄4 inches 270. White zircon and silver-gilt pendant Southeast Asia, 20th century White zircons, silver gilt, woven chain H: 4 inches 112 271. Synthetic ruby and gilt metal pendant Southeast Asia, 20th century Synthetic ruby, gilt metal, woven chain H: 2 3⁄4 inches 275. Gem-set and gold bangle bracelet Southeast Asia, 20th century Colored gemstones, gold 272. Two groups of jewelry Comprising Asian metal bracelets, coral necklaces, turquoise necklaces, single earrings, buttons, links, etc. 276. Pair of gold tassel earrings Southeast Asia, 20th century Gold H: 1 3⁄4 inches 277. Three gold turban ornaments Southeast Asia, 20th century Gold Length of longest: 5 inches 273. Pair of ruby, emerald, and diamond circular ear clips Southeast Asia, 20th century Rubies, emeralds, diamonds, gold D: 3⁄4 inches 278. Center section of Ottoman diamond and gold necklace Mid 19th century Diamonds, gold L: 5 inches 274. Pair of white zircon and gold ear pendants Southeast Asia 20th century White zircons, silver gilt (with a matching panel with chain decoration) Length of ear pendants: 2 1⁄2 inches 279. An Ottoman diamond star and crescent brooch Mid 19th century Diamonds, gold W: 11⁄2 inches 113 280. An Ottoman diamond and gold floral spray brooch Mid 19th century Diamonds, gold The central five-petal rosette is set en tremblant, a feature of diamond jewelry from the mid nineteenth century in which decorative elements are set on a tiny spring so that, when worn, it moves or “trembles.” H: 4 inches 285. Gold and enamel bead necklace Thai, 19th century Gold, red stones, enamel 281. Silver-gilt and niello belt Turkish, 20th century Niello, enamel, silver gilt Length of buckle: 2 3⁄4 inches Length of belt: 32 1⁄2 inches 286. Gold and enamel turban pin Thai, 19th century Enamel, gold L: 4 inches 282. Ruby and gold pendant Persian or Central Asian, 16th or 17th century Rubies, gold, gold woven chain 287. Two Medieval gold rings Javanese Rubies, cat’s eye, gold 283. Gold and enameled pendant Thai, 19th century Diamonds, enamel, gold 288. Gem-set bracelet Egyptian, 20th century Amber, faience, lapis lazuli, silver L: 8 3⁄4 inches 284. Diamond and enamel marriage ring Thai, 19th century Gold, rubies, enamel 289. Pair of jade bangles China 114 290. Miniature green jade gu-form vase China Jade H: 5 7⁄8 inches 294. Gem-set hair pin 291. Miniature dark green jade altar garniture China Comprising a censer and cover, a pair of gu-form beaker vases, and a pair of pricket candlesticks. Height: 5 inches 295. Cameo bracelet Shell, gold L: 75⁄8 inches 292. Gem-set hair ornament 296. Pair of doll’s gold buckles and parts of two other items Siam Emeralds, rubies, diamonds, chased gold Siam Colored gemstones, gold H: 4 inches Gold, diamonds 293. Gem-set hair ornaments Siam Colored gemstones, gilt metal H: 1 inch 115