Jewelry, Gems and Diamonds Doing Well At Auction
September 06, 09The Wittelsbach Blue was auctioned for $24.3 million |
In the article, global arts reporter Souren Melikian quotes David Bennet, chairman of Sotheby’s jewelry departments in Europe and the
He starts this round of high sales figures with the Wittelsbach diamond sale in December 2008, fetching a record £16.39 million ($24.31 million).
The next sale sighted is the "Star of Josephine," a fancy vivid blue, weighing 7.03 carats., bringing in $9.48 million, just over $1.34 million a carat, making the diamond the most expensive stone per carat ever sold in any category. At the same
Also selling well were jewelry pieces that were either already collectible, or interpreted by the market as being collectable.
Tiaras necklaces and earrings all with documented ownership by European royalty at times almost quadrupled their estimates. For example, a pair of ear clips described as “the property of a German Princely and Liechtenstein Ruling Family,” did just that when it just barely missed sold for $420,000.
Another example of the heights collectible jewelry is reaching can be seen in a relatively newcomer to the market. A necklace of gold swan heads holding blue sodalite disks in their beaks, marked with the name of Lalaounis and dated to 1995 by its UK hallmark, was sold at $24,450, two and a half times the high estimate.
Because of the desire for collectible pieces, 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s stamped and marked pieces by famous designers are also doing well. A mystery set by Van Cleef & Arpels designed in the form of two intertwined leaves set with sapphires and diamonds hauled in $112,845, well over the expected price.