Cartier jewellery collecting guide

Loved by royalty and Hollywood stars, Cartier has been synonymous with glamour for more than a century. We look at some of its most iconic jewels, from the peak of Art Deco to ‘Panthère’ and ‘Tutti Frutti’ — illustrated with pieces offered at Christie’s

Cartier. An Art Deco diamond necklace, circa 1935. Sold for CHF 4,461,500 on 12 November 2024 at Christie’s in Geneva. In the video above Althéa Hanshaw, Jewellery specialist in Geneva, unveils some of Cartier’s most historic and alluring jewels

Cartier: a glittering history

The house of Cartier was founded in 1847, when the 28-year-old Louis-François Cartier took over a shop at 29 Rue Montorgueil in Paris. His son Alfred Cartier took control of the company in 1874, by which time it already had an excellent reputation. However, it was Alfred’s three sons — Louis, Pierre and Jacques — who would go on to establish Cartier as a world-famous jewellery brand.

While Louis retained responsibility for Paris, in 1902 Pierre went to London and, only two years later, received the Royal Warrant, thereby supplying jewellery to King Edward VII and his court. In 1909, leaving Jacques in charge of the London business, Pierre travelled to New York and set up shop there. In 1917, he famously acquired 653 Fifth Avenue for two strands of the very finest pearls, and that piece of prime real estate remains a flagship store to this day.

Since then the firm has expanded globally, becoming what many consider to be the finest jewellery house in the world. Its clientele has encompassed royalty, film stars and business tycoons. King Farouk of Egypt, the Duchess of Windsor, Elizabeth Taylor, Grace Kelly and Clark Gable all went to Cartier to buy jewellery or have pieces made.

The modern style: Art Deco

The 1920s and 1930s saw Cartier create objects in the Art Deco style, amplified by Europe’s fascination with Asia. Fine jewellery and more quotidian objects such as minaudières, brooches, clocks, cigarette cases and picture frames were embellished with European and ‘Oriental’ forms that became signature motifs of the maison’s creations at the time. Wrought in exceptional and often rare materials, these objects are exemplars of the style moderne of the era.

Cartier’s ‘Great Cats’

In 1914, the first ‘Great Cat’ motif entered the Cartier family by means of an onyx-spotted panther-pattern wristwatch created by the famous French designer Charles Jacqueau. Through the years, the initial pattern has evolved into fully sculpted animals, and the array of cats has widened to include the tiger as well as the panther.

Promoted to director of high jewellery at Cartier in 1933, Jeanne Toussaint, a feline-lover nicknamed ‘the Panther’ by Louis Cartier and her colleagues, immediately took responsibility for supervising the ‘Great Cat’ designs. Together with Peter Lemarchand, a designer of outstanding creativity, she produced a variety of jewels that immortalised the feline motif in the annals of Cartier design.

After the first three-dimensional panther was created in 1948 for the Duchess of Windsor, other distinguished Cartier clients began to fall in love with the jewels. Daisy Fellowes and Nina Dyer, for example, both appropriated this new look. American heiress Barbara Hutton, a noted style rival of the Duchess of Windsor, also had a preference for Toussaint’s tiger menagerie.

Over the course of more than a century, the iconic Cartier cats have gone through multiple variations, but they are still considered a must-have for jewellery collectors today. Feline designs from the 1980s and 1990s only increased the demand for these spectacular jewels.

‘Trinity’ rings: chic for 100 years

Cartier’s three-ring ‘Trinity’ design marked its centenary in 2024, having first made its appearance in 1924 during the craze for Art Deco jewellery. It was designed by Jean Cocteau, the French writer, painter, filmmaker and poet, who was a great friend of Louis Cartier.

The simplicity of the three interlocking rings, each of a different gold colour, quickly made the design a classic. It seemed appropriate that this ring, said to symbolise friendship, fidelity and love, should be a favourite among jewellery collectors. Despite its simple appearance, the ‘Trinity’ is a technical feat that requires perfect craftsmanship to allow the three bands to slide smoothly over the skin.

The multi-gem ‘Tutti Frutti’ style

Cartier has always been at the forefront of innovation. Jacques Cartier first visited India in 1911 and, through his buying agents in Delhi, Calcutta (now Kolkata) and Bombay (Mumbai), managed to acquire Indian rubies, sapphires and emeralds, carved with floral motifs, at relatively modest prices.

The workshops in Paris assimilated Indian designs into a new style of multi-gem jewellery, far removed from the typical severity of purely diamond-based Art Deco pieces. This became known as Cartier’s ‘Tutti Frutti’ style.

The genre reached its peak with a stunning piece, the ‘Hindu necklace’, commissioned in 1936 by the heiress to the Singer sewing-machine fortune, Daisy Fellowes.

‘Love’ and ‘Juste un Clou’

In 1969, Aldo Cipullo joined Cartier in New York after serving an apprenticeship in his native Italy, and later at David Webb. Within two years, he had created two of the most iconic Cartier designs: the ‘Love’ and the ‘Juste un Clou’ — minimalist, whimsical and ingenious.

The ‘Juste un Clou’ (meaning ‘only a nail’) is a brilliantly imaginative creation, taking the form of a simple carpentry nail that has been dramatically curved to turn it into a bangle, ring or earring.

The ‘Love’ bracelet, a band in two sections, has to be screwed together with the aid of a screwdriver — provided by Cartier, of course. (Once in a place, the bracelet is not intended to be removed.) In a brilliant marketing move, Cartier made the decision to gift his-and-her love bracelets to the most famous couples of the era, including Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, and Steve McQueen and Ali McGraw.

A symbol as strong as the eternity ring itself, the ‘Love’ bracelet has been, for more than half a century, a token of love and attachment.

‘Jeweller of kings’: great Cartier collectors

King Edward VII referred to Cartier as ‘the jeweller of kings and the king of jewellers’, and the maison’s reputation was such that at the 1911 coronation of King George V, no fewer than 19 of the tiaras worn at the ceremony were by Cartier. From Spain to Russia, India to Siam, the world’s royalty made Cartier the pre-eminent supplier of aristocratic jewellery.

Socialites and movie stars followed suit, with Merle Oberon, Grace Kelly and Gloria Swanson all becoming great collectors of Cartier jewellery.

The most discerning collectors of diamonds would go to Cartier to have them mounted. Such was the case with Solomon Barnato Joel, who had made his fortune in South African diamond mines, being the director of Barnato Brothers as well as De Beers Consolidated. In 1912, he asked Cartier to mount four of his best diamonds, resulting in the creation of a spectacular devant-de-corsage brooch, which was the height of fashion during the Belle Epoque.

Designed around a central pear-shaped diamond of more than 34 carats, the devant-de-corsage is an example of the subtle and delicate ‘Lily-of-the-Valley’ setting used by Cartier around 1910 and mastered by its famous workshop, the Atelier Henri Picq, in Paris.

In the 21st century, Cartier remains a favourite among great jewellery collectors and members of royal families. For example, Catherine, Princess of Wales, chose to wear the Cartier Halo diamond tiara for her wedding to Prince William in 2011.

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