Exceptional horologic works of art

Hotel Noga Hilton, Geneva, Oct 11, 2003

LOT 3

Varuna of New York Yacht Club. A. Van Cleef & Arpels, Joailliers, Paris, circa 1907. Very fine and very rare gold and enamel, jasper and ebony model of the yacht Varuna equipped with electrical contacts for a butler's bell.

CHF 15,000 - 20,000

EUR 9,800 - 13,000

Sold: CHF 23,000

On an oval ebony base, sailing on a stormy ocean with its waves finely carved from a solid piece of jasper set in a gold frame at the base, the ship in gold, white and green enamel with cabin windows set with rubies, the chimney and the boats in white enamel, silvered deck, American flag at the stern, gold, silver, and enamel life-savers fixed on each side of the jasper with the words "VARUNA, N.Y.Y.C." Signed underneath the gold frame supporting the ocean.Dim: Length of the ocean 19 cm, ship 12.5 cm.


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Grading System
Grade: AAA

Excellent

Case: 3

Good

Movement: -
Dial: -

Notes

Van Cleef & Arpels. The son of a diamond merchant who arrived in France in the mid 19th century, Charles Van Cleef settled in Paris. In 1898 his son Alfred set up shop as a goldsmith, and then married Estelle Arpels, the daughter of Léon Arpels, a dealer in precious stones. In 1906, Alfred Van Cleef and Charles Arpels founded a firm for "the creation and operation of a business dealing in precious stones and jewelry". They opened a shop at 22 Place Vendôme, and in a few months were so successful that they had to engage a salesman. At the same time as the expansion of the Place Vendôme, branches were opened in various different French seaside resorts. The company participated in numerous exhibitions, especially the International Exhibition of Decorative Arts in 1925 where it won a Grand Prix. In 1926 Renée Puissant, daughter of Alfred Van Cleef, took up the position of artistic director in close collaboration with René Sim Lacaze, the unrivaled designer and creator, who worked with the firm from 1922 to 1939. In 1929 Van Cleef & Arpels opened in New York on the day of the Wall Street crash. From 1939, the firm grew successfully in the United States thanks to Louis, Julien, and his young son Claude. Claude and Jacques Arpels continued in the tradition of their forbears and after the Second World War it was the turn of their youngest brother Pierre to enter the firm. As he wished to own a unique watch, Pierre Arpels designed the model "P.A. 49". This marked the beginning of lines for both men and women which were to lead in 1972 to a specialist shop. In 1954, the firm decided to open the first "boutique" next to the main establishment. Numerous branches exist in the world today, including one in Japan, since 1972. The firm is universally known for its 1934 invention of "invisible setting", an unparalleled method of showing precious stones in a completely new way.