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Showing posts with label Line Vautrin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Line Vautrin. Show all posts

Sunday, August 30, 2015

The jewelry of Line Vautrin (Repost)

An earlier post about French designer Line Vautrin focused on her mirrors, which she called her "witches." She was also known for jewelry, boxes, powder compacts and other objects.

She started making gilt bronze jewelry at age 15 and selling it door-to-door. Already quite savvy about business, she sent out her invoices under her father's letterhead, because she was too young to own a company.

Her work was bold and dramatic, and it was often inscribed with the words of her favorite poets, prompting Vogue magazine to call her "The Poetess of Metal."

She was a prolific artist, setting a goal for herself of one object each day.

From independent.co.uk, agentofstyle.com and line-vautrin.fr

(Technical issues resulted in search engine problems for almost two years' worth of my older posts, so I am reposting the ones I consider most informative. Though some of you have already viewed them, they will be new to others of you. Originally posted 10/6/2013)


C'est la vie bracelet
line-vautrin.fr

Icare bracelet
line-vautrin.fr

Les arrondissements de Paris bracelet
line-vautrin.fr

Vertebres necklace
line-vautrin.fr

Le furet necklace
line-vautrin.fr

Petit poisson deviendra grand necklace
line-vautrin.fr
Les cœurs de Paris earrings
line-vautrin.fr

O comme oreilles earrings
line-vautrin.fr

Le Métro belt
line-vautrin.fr

Drapé powder compact
line-vautrin.fr

De la poudre powder compact
line-vautrin.fr

Le jour et la nuit powder compact
line-vautrin.fr

Drapé  frangé  cigarette box
line-vautrin.fr

La mer cigar box
line-vautrin.fr

In the 1973 photo below, Vautrin poses in front of one of  her folding screens. She is holding a Talosel sculpture with metal inlays. On her right is a Talosel egg inlayed with mirrors.


line-vautrin.fr

Saturday, August 29, 2015

The mirrors of Line Vautrin (Repost)

Line Vautrin (1913-1997) was a French metal artist and designer. She was born to a family of metal workers and began learning the family business in her teens. She received no formal education in art or design, but by age 15, she was already selling her gilt bronze costume jewelry.

She took a job at the House of Schiaparelli, where it was her job to open the door and greet customers. She decided after only four days that working for a boss, even a famous couturier, was not for her, so she started selling her designs door-to-door.

In 1937 she rented a booth at the Universal Exhibition and showed bronze buttons, necklaces, bracelets, earrings, belt buckles and bag clips. The next year, at age 28, she opened her first boutique near the Champs-Elysées.

In the early 1940s, she began to create bronze boxes, powder compacts, ashtrays and pillboxes. During this same time, she married Jacques-Armand Bonnaud, a talented artist and decorator who had graduated from the Beaux Arts in Paris. Together they bought and renovated a beautiful home which became one of the most fashionable venues in the city.

In the 1950s and 1960s, Vautrin became interested in new materials, primarily cellulose acetate, which she called Talosel, and synthetic resin, which she encrusted with mirrored glass. It was at this time that she began creating beautiful convex mirrors, most notably large sunburst designs. She called these mirrors her "witches," and sold them to celebrities such as Ingrid Bergman, Yul Brynner and Brigitte Bardot.

When she was 50, she left manufacturing and the retail business and began teaching.

Because her body of work is so large, I'm going to focus on her mirrors in this post, although the photos I include represent just a few of many. I will post at a later date about her dramatic jewelry and boxes.

From line-vautrin.fr and independent.co.uk


(Technical issues resulted in search engine problems for almost two years' worth of my older posts, so I am reposting the ones I consider most informative. Though some of you have already viewed them, they will be new to others of you. Originally posted 9/29/2013)


Aldebaran mirror
line-vautrin.fr


Colbert mirror
line-vautrin.fr


Ètincelle mirror
line-vautrin.fr


Ombelle mirror
line-vautrin.fr


Roi Soleil mirror
line-vautrin.fr


Satellites mirror
line-vautrin.fr


Sequins mirror
line-vautrin.fr


Soucis mirror
line-vautrin.fr


Soleil Torsade mirror
line-vautrin.fr



Sunday, October 6, 2013

Line Vautrin revisited

An earlier post about French designer Line Vautrin focused on her mirrors, which she called her "witches." She was also known for jewelry, boxes, powder compacts and other objects.

She started making gilt bronze jewelry at age 15 and selling it door-to-door. Already quite savvy about business, she sent out her invoices under her father's letterhead, because she was too young to own a company.

Her work was bold and dramatic, and it was often inscribed with the words of her favorite poets, prompting Vogue magazine to call her "The Poetess of Metal."

She was a prolific artist, setting a goal for herself of "one object each day."

From independent.co.uk, agentofstyle.com and line-vautrin.fr


C'est la vie bracelet
line-vautrin.fr

Icare bracelet
line-vautrin.fr

Les arrondissements de Paris bracelet
line-vautrin.fr

Vertebres necklace
line-vautrin.fr

Le furet necklace
line-vautrin.fr

Petit poisson deviendra grand necklace
line-vautrin.fr
Les cœurs de Paris earrings
line-vautrin.fr

O comme oreilles earrings
line-vautrin.fr

Le Métro belt
line-vautrin.fr

Drapé powder compact
line-vautrin.fr

De la poudre powder compact
line-vautrin.fr

Le jour et la nuit powder compact
line-vautrin.fr

Drapé  frangé  cigarette box
line-vautrin.fr

La mer cigar box
line-vautrin.fr

In the 1973 photo below, Vautrin poses in front of one of  her folding screens. She is holding a Talosel sculpture with metal inlays. On her right is a Talosel egg inlayed with mirrors.


line-vautrin.fr

Sunday, September 29, 2013

The mirrors of Line Vautrin

Line Vautrin (1913-1997) was a French metal artist and designer. She was born to a family of metal workers and began learning the family business in her teens. She received no formal education in art or design, but by age 15, she was already selling her gilt bronze costume jewelry.

She took a job at the House of Schiaparelli, where it was her job to open the door and greet customers. She decided after only four days that working for a boss, even a famous couturier, was not for her, so she started selling her designs door-to-door.

In 1937 she rented a booth at the Universal Exhibition and showed bronze buttons, necklaces, bracelets, earrings, belt buckles and bag clips. The next year, at age 28, she opened her first boutique near the Champs-Elysées.

In the early 1940s, she began to create bronze boxes, powder compacts, ashtrays and pillboxes. During this same time, she married Jacques-Armand Bonnaud, a talented artist and decorator who had graduated from the Beaux Arts in Paris. Together they bought and renovated a beautiful home which became one of the most fashionable venues in the city.

In the 1950s and 1960s, Vautrin became interested in new materials, primarily cellulose acetate, which she called Talosel, and synthetic resin, which she encrusted with mirrored glass. It was at this time that she began creating beautiful convex mirrors, most notably large sunburst designs. She called these mirrors her "witches," and sold them to celebrities such as Ingrid Bergman, Yul Brynner and Brigitte Bardot.

When she was 50, she left manufacturing and the retail business and began teaching.

Because her body of work is so large, I'm going to focus on her mirrors in this post, although the photos I include represent just a few of many. I will post at a later date about her dramatic jewelry and boxes.

From line-vautrin.fr and independent.co.uk



Aldebaran mirror
line-vautrin.fr

Colbert mirror
line-vautrin.fr

Ètincelle mirror
line-vautrin.fr

Ombelle mirror
line-vautrin.fr

Roi Soleil mirror
line-vautrin.fr

Satellites mirror
line-vautrin.fr

Sequins mirror
line-vautrin.fr

Soucis mirror
line-vautrin.fr

Soleil Torsade mirror
line-vautrin.fr