Dragonfly brooch (broche libellule en diamants)
(1890)
© Edgar Bense


Conceived as a dazzling dragonfly with delicate plique-à-jour wings, this brooch epitomizes the Art Nouveau style in both fashion and manufacture. With its translucent wings set en tremblant and its sparking rose-cut diamonds, the present jewel catches the light brilliantly. In the enameling technique called plique-à-jour, vitreous enamel is applied to openwork wire cells without a backing, creating the transparent effect of stained glass. The house of Boucheron was founded in 1858 by Frédéric Boucheron (1830–1902). First opened in the Galerie de Valois, under the arcades of the Palais Royal, the shop was perfectly situated in the center of Second Empire Parisian luxury. In 1893 Boucheron moved to the Place Vendôme—the first of the great French houses to occupy that location—where it remains headquartered to this day, with more than 30 branches across the globe.
Dragonfly brooch, Edgar Bense, Gold, diamond, enamel, French







©  Barbara Regina Dietzsch (allemande) : tulipes et pivoines, (1750) gouache sur papier...




© Ernest-Ange Duez (Français, 1843 - 1896), Pivoines (1894), pointe sèche sur papier vergé.






Manufacture de Vincennes P: aire de bouquets de fleurs, XVIIIè siècle
Fleurs de porcelaine tendre montées sur cannetille recouverte de feuilles de soie...