EMILE OLIVE (1852 - 1902)

Belle Epoque Brooch/Pendant

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EMILE OLIVE (1852 - 1902)

Belle Epoque Brooch/Pendant

Gold, silver, plique-à-jour enamel, emerald, diamond & pearl

H  9.00cm (3.54 in)  |  W  5.20cm (2.05 in)

Origin France, c. 1895
Marks Makers mark 'FO' for Maison Fonsèque and Olive
Case Fitted Case
Condition Very good
Weight 37.80 Grams

Emile Olive succeeded Georges Le Saché as designer for Lucien Falize. He left Falize in 1885 to form a partnership with Georges Fonsèque in Paris. After Olive’s death in 1902 Fonseque continued the business for a further twenty years.
This pendant is an exceptional example of the fusion of Japonisme and Art Nouveau in France. The background in plique-à-jour enamel represents a lily pond in the Japanese cloisonné manner on which a magnificent blister pearl set in gold appears to float. The fine diamond-studded frame surround shows the elegant and characteristic swirls of the French Art Nouveau style.

Literature
Illustrated in our book:
Beatriz Chadour-Sampson & Sonya Newell-Smith, Tadema Gallery London Jewellery from the 1860s to 1960s, Arnoldsche Art Publishers, Stuttgart 2021, cat. no. 463
cf. Henri Vever's La Bijouterie Française au XIXe Siècle, translated by Katherine Purcell, p. 1021 more designs by Emile Olive.

Price Code

Ref No   284

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