Style

29 November 2019

Lydia Courteille: the life of an antique jewelry dealer

Before becoming a designer, Lydia Courteille was an antique jewelry dealer. In fact, she hasn’t made a complete break with her former job…

 

 

“During my time as a dealer, I bought around 7,000 antique jewelry items from private individuals or in sales,” says Lydia Courteille.  She learned the ropes at Au Vase de Delft, then set up on her own in the early 1980s. Antique jewelry did not have as high a price index as today, and was really for the initiated. Her store/cabinet of curiosities was groaning with marvels: Art Nouveau brooches, Etruscan earrings, 19th century Indian necklaces and more. She presented pieces by Suzanne Belperron early on, and started the trend for vanitases – death’s heads mounted as rings. At the time, Karl Lagerfeld was one of her loyal customers.

 

A passion for glyptics

In her former profession, Lydia Courteille dealt in hundreds of cameos and intaglios: stones engraved in relief or hollow relief, particularly in vogue during Antiquity and the 19th century. She developed a passion for them… “When they are exquisitely made, they can attain high prices that only a few connoisseurs can appreciate. A fine museum-worthy four-headed cameo can easily command €30,000.” Her favorites are the most extraordinary: those carved not from agate but from precious stones like emerald, sapphire or rubellite.

 

Her creations

Today, Lydia Courteille has turned to design: a Baroque-style design tinged with an 18th century spirit. She avoids natural materials, and often draws on her stock of antique components, incorporating them into her designs or giving new life to the precious stones of a rather dull rabbit brooch. “They ended up on one of my cuff bracelets,” she says. A kind of jewelry up-cycling she also applies to cameos, which she reinterprets by having precious stones carved with her own motifs, such as this two-headed eagle, Catherine II or Leda and the Swan.

 

Lydia Courteille is the guest of the next Evening Conversation of The School of Jewelry Arts

 

Most popular articles

In Japan, in the workshop of Shinji Nakaba

In 2023, the Loewe Foundation Craft prize brought Shinji Nakaba into the spotlight, but this self-taught jewelry designer had in fact been creating jewelry...

René Boivin's felines

From then until the company’s closure, the archives were populated by felines. It’s not just a coincidence.

Emmanuel Tarpin, jeweler of light and shade

Emmanuel Tarpin has not sought to echo the magnificent orchids of Tiffany & CO. or those of René Lalique, created over a century ago. That said, his...

Giorgio B. by Giorgio Bulgari, High Jewelry as heritage

Giorgio Bulgari signs his jewelry Giorgio B. because yes, he belongs to the Bulgari family, a house of Italian origin now owned by the LVMH group.

Anna Hu, the technical prowess of haute joaillerie made in France

The jewelry of designer Anna Hu is as beautiful as it is spectacular. It’s also highly technical…

René Boivin and Suzanne Belperron, the inseparable pair

Thomas Torroni-Levene and Olivier Baroin, the two guardians of Maison Boivin and Suzanne Belperron now represent the convergence of two houses that, without...