brummell december 2012
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Brummell December 2012TRANSCRIPT
december 2012
Stellar stylestars of the season’s accessories & jewellery / aurora borealis adventures
watches with racing pedigree / the world’s best car rally / luxury ski chalets
the little black book for the city
Invention of the Tourbillon, 1801
The Classique Grande Complication Tourbillon 5317 provides the perfect
setting for Breguet’s most spectacular invention and undeniably the most
beautiful of all horological complications, developed over 210 years ago
to compensate for the effects of gravity. On the back, the “B-shaped”
oscillating weight reveals the beauty of the meticulously hand-engraved
movement. History is still being written...
Breguet, the innovator.
B R E G U E T B O U T I Q U E – 1 0 A N E W B O N D S T R E E T L O N D O N W 1 S 3 S P + 4 4 2 0 7 3 5 5 17 3 5 – W W W. B R E G U E T. C O M
List of Boutiques available on www.chanel.com
NEW ULTRA RING
WHITE GOLD, CERAMIC AND DIAMONDS
The art of giving
Welcome to the December edition
of Brummell. This issue revels in indolent
indulgence – commissioning bespoke footwear;
or renting that extraordinary ski chalet; thinking
about putting your name down for the highly
recommended new Range Rover, out early next
year; or considering diamonds as an interesting
direction for a personal investment portfolio.
But we also take a short stroll down the path
of philanthropy. Columnist David Charters
describes how grand strategies and lucrative
deals may seem massively important, but asks
if they will be indicators of a life lived well?
He suggests that, as smart City individuals,
applying work skills to help mobilise talent and
capital and create solutions to problems outside
the square mile will ensure an enduring impact.
If that seems a big step, make a start with your
nearest and dearest in this season of giving
and take some inspiration from Brummell’s
pages – then look to the greater good.
Joanne Glasbey, Editor
welcome leTTeR | BRUmmell 07
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la montre hermès tames time so as to master its measurement. at the heart
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CONTENTS | BRUMMELL 11
Foreword
Giving back is as important as making the
deal, says David Charters
Money No Object The latest masterpiece of marine design
from iconic Italian boatbuilders Riva Yachts
BeaumondeNews
High-end audio; a beautiful backgammon
set; a designer bicycle; aged malt whisky
Footwear
JM Weston shoes – French, bespoke and
the choice of many a Monsieur le Président
MotoringSports car, off-roader, limousine… the
new Range Rover is many cars in one
SuitingThe new generation of tailors offering an
alternative to the bespoke establishment
Ski chaletsThe mountain retreats that are offering
summit special this season After The CityThe woman who gave up City horsetrading to
set up an equestrian investment venture
FeaturesMotoring watches
Performance cars and timepieces have
always had a close relationship, but in these
watches it is a perfectly realised association
DiamondsThe romance – and economics – of collecting
the rarest and most impressive of gems
Northern LightsIn a winter when the Aurora Borealis is
showing off more than usual, northern
Sweden is the place to catch the display
Jewellery
Cuffs in all types of gold are the star
of the show this party season, whether
they’re embellished or sculptural
Mille Miglia
Taking to the most scenic roads of Italy
in a Thirties Bentley, as part of the world’s
greatest vintage car rally
Accessories
Indulge yourself – or your nearest and
dearest – with choice adornments
By George
The story of jeweller Harry Winston, the
originator of red-carpet Hollywood glamour
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22
24
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66
Contents
Show Media Brummell editorial 020 3222 0101
Editor
Joanne Glasbey
Art Director
Dominic Bell
Chief Copy Editor
Chris Madigan
Managing EditorLucy Teasdale
Picture EditorJuliette Hedoin
Designer
Jo Murray
Editorial Assistant Charlie Teasdale
Copy Editor
Cate Langmuir
Style Director
Tamara Fulton
Creative Director
Ian Pendleton
Managing Director
Peter Howarth
Advertising & Events Director
Duncan McRae
07816 218059
showmedia.net
Visit Brummell’s website for
more tailor-made content:
brummellmagazine.net
Colour reproduction by Fresh Media Group, groupfmg.com
Printed by The Manson Group, manson-grp.co.uk
Brummell is published by Show Media Ltd. All material ©
Show Media Ltd. Reproduction in whole or in part without
written permission is strictly prohibited. While every
effort is made to ensure the accuracy of the information
contained in this publication, no responsibility can
be accepted for any errors or omissions. The information
contained in this publication is correct at the time of
going to press. £5 (where sold). Reader offers are
the responsibility of the organisation making the offer
– Show Media accepts no liabillity regarding offers.
Cover illustration by Brett Ryder
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foreword | BrUMMeLL 15
How do you want to be remembered? If you had the chance to write your own obituary today, what would it say?
It is an interesting exercise and a way to remind yourself what matters. If you work in the City it is easy to become so absorbed in the most demanding of careers that you rarely pause for thought. Pushing the next big M & A deal over the finishing line, keeping that place at the top of the Equity Capital Market league tables for the third year running, beating Goldman Sachs to that restructuring mandate… It might all seem massively important today, worthy of almost any sacrifice, yet how will it seem when (if) you celebrate your 90th birthday and look back on a life you hope has been well lived?
At the start of my career in the City – this will give away my age – a senior colleague told me that today’s headlines are tomorrow’s fish-and-chip paper. We are no longer allowed to eat fish and chips wrapped up in newspaper but the point remains valid. On your deathbed, your grieving friends and family will not be thinking wistfully of the collection of Lucite blocks – tombstones – commemorating deals for long-forgotten companies.
It would be nice for us all to look back and think we got the basics right – that we were good husbands or wives, parents, neighbours and citizens; that we embodied the virtues of hard work, diligence, honesty and compassion. But investment banking is not really like that. The hours, the pressure, the competition, the politics, the sudden-death ends to promising careers as the industry goes through one of its periodic restructurings, the rollercoaster of failure and success in the high-stakes room in life’s casino, all tend to get in the way of the basic virtues.
Many good people in the City
devote all their talent and energy
to making numbers, rather
than getting this lifetime right
Which is not to say there are no good people in the City – there are huge numbers of them. But much of the time these good people are chained to the treadmill and many devote all of their formidable talent and energy to making this year’s numbers, when it should be going into getting this lifetime right.
Pioneering a new super-fast mean reversion trading strategy in the FX markets that raises divisional revenues by 20 per cent in what would otherwise have been a down year might seem like a great coup now, but in ten years time it won’t even be a footnote.
It is time we memorialised ourselves. Luckily, we are singularly well equipped to do so. At a time of economic hardship, we are still among the most well-heeled people on the planet. And we are not just rich but smart, too. We can analyse problems, test solutions, innovate and adapt when we get push-back, and we are used to overcoming obstacles. We expect to win.
So in the face of some of society’s biggest issues, a failing system of education, say, which the government alone cannot fix, we can get off our backsides, mobilise talent and capital and create academy schools that will provide the solution. And yes, if we want, we can name schools after ourselves or whatever group we form to put our benevolence into practice. Is it all about ego? It shouldn’t
The finer things in life don’t always come in the shape of a flashy
sports car or a ski chalet. As David Charters suggests,
there are more worthwhile ways of making your mark on society
Illustration Brett Ryder
Markingtime
be but if that is what it takes to achieve the outcomes society needs, then even a cynic like me will bite his tongue.
A new school, or a clinic in a developing nation, or a coral reef turned into a marine park are all more impressive than a chalet in Verbier – anyone with a chequebook can have one of those, whereas the other things require effort, application and intelligence, as well as virtue.
And with the proper structures in place they can last forever. Endow a new lab or library at your old university and a part of you will live forever. Buy a painting for the nation and your name will be attached to something finer and nobler than you could ever have created. Set up a scholarship scheme and you provide for the development of generations of talent that will far exceed your own.
The best route of all, rather than giving alone, is to mobilise others to do so, or even to create an entity combining a social purpose with a commercial base that will sustain itself and expand in the future without you.
And this stuff is fun. It teaches your children things that they might struggle to learn from you at work. It makes a statement about values and objectives, that life is about more than the Ferrari in the drive.
Furthermore, if a few more of us became involved in such initiatives, the City might have a better name at a time when it needs an image makeover and a lot more friends. But, most of all, we would have the reassurance that our impact extended beyond the obvious material objects in our lives. Last but not least, our obituaries would be far more inspiring.
The Ego’s Nest by David Charters, the fifth novel
in the series about City anti-hero Dave Hart, is
published by Elliott & Thompson, priced £6.99
BRUMMELL 17
‘Well, nobody’s perfect,’ says millionaire Osgood
Fielding III, at the helm of his Riva launch, when
his fiancée ‘Daphne’ reveals herself to be Jack
Lemmon at the end of Some Like It Hot. Perhaps
nobody is perfect, but some design comes close.
Riva celebrated its 170th anniversary this year
– and 60 years since it launched its quintessential
model, the Aquarama. However, the company is
not living in the past. From its boatyard on Lago
d’Iseo, between Como and Garda, it launches at
least one new design a year. The latest is the 63ft
Virtus, its largest-ever open speedboat. While
wooden hulls have given way to fibreglass, there
is much teak to be caressed on the typically wide
foredeck, as well as the cockpit, and the lines
remain sleek and low-profile, even on such a large
vessel with a main cabin, galley and six berths
below deck. The Virtus offers sporty thrills (its
twin V12s take you to 40.5 knots) but settles into
an extremely smooth ride at its 35kn cruising
speed, with a range of 250 nautical miles. So
touring the Med (or English Riviera) is feasible.
If you need more space, wait for Riva’s largest-
ever yacht, the 122ft Mythos, launched in 2013.
Riva Virtus, from €2.2 million; riva-yacht.com
The impeccable Italian style of
Riva boats continues in its
latest model, the 63ft Virtus
Words Chris Madigan
MONEY NO
OBJECT
Paradise Found
Petite Anse Bay, on the south west coast of Mahe, is the location for one of the world’s
finest and most exclusive beaches. The three - to six - bedroom freehold Four Seasons
Private Residences nestle amid secluded plots averaging one hectare.
Each villa is uniquely designed by the internationally acclaimed architect Cheong Yew
Kuan to harmonise with the dramatic granite landscape and panoramic ocean views.
Owners can take advantage of the Concierge Service and the extensive facilities at the
renowned Four Seasons Resort Seychelles set in the middle of the 70 hectare estate.
Prices from US$7,250,000
LONDON: +44 20 8166 8122
www.petiteansedevelopments.com
Four Seasons Private Residences Seychelles are not owned, developed or sold by Four Seasons Hotels Limited or its affiliates (Four Seasons). The developer, Petite Anse Developments Ltd., uses the Four Seasons trademarks and tradenames
under a license from Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts Asia Pacific Pte Ltd. The marks “FOUR SEASONS”, “FOUR SEASONS HOTELS AND RESORTS,” any combination thereof and the Tree Design are registered trademarks of Four Seasons
Hotels Limited in Canada and U.S.A. and of Four Seasons Hotels (Barbados) Ltd. elsewhere.
NEWS | bEAumoNdE 19
Audio enticement, beautiful backgammon and a gorgeous new bike
Going dutch ↑Cycling is more popular now than
it’s ever been, and it’s time to join
the race. But what sort of cyclist
do you want to be? Suit jacket in
a backpack, riding a hybrid? Full
lycra on a £5,000 titanium racing
frame? Regardless of cycling style,
Vanhulsteijn Bicycles has just made
the rigmarole of choosing a new bike
much easier. The Dutch company
creates innovative bikes that not
only look great, but ride like a
dream. From single to 11-speed,
each bike is hand-built to perfectly
fit the dimensions of the rider, and
its latest creation is the stunning
‘Cyclone’. The curve running from
saddle to back wheel gives the
impression the rider is floating on
air, which they are in a way because
the unique design and high-quality
materials allow for a fast, smooth
ride. You’ll be looking for any excuse
to hop on your bike, because it
means you get to ride a work of art.
From €1,400; vanhulsteijn.com
Briny, deep
Continuing the trend for limited-
edition, super-aged single malts,
Old Pulteney has finally released
its 40 Year Old. Established in 1826,
the distillery in Wick is the most
northerly in mainland Scotland.
Following on from the award-
winning 21 Year Old, the 40 Year
Old carries an intriguing array of
tasting notes, including the briny
characteristic created by all the sea
air whipping around the distillery.
What’s more, it comes in a hand-
blown azure bottle, making it as
epic on the outside as it is on the
tongue. £1,500; oldpulteney.com
burgundy in your pocket ↑With 100 appellations and more than 3,000
producers, France’s Burgundy region can seem
overwhelming. But thanks to Berry Bros. & Rudd,
Jasper Morris’ acclaimed book Inside Burgundy:
The Côte de Beaune has been turned into an
interactive eBook for iPad and iPad Mini, to be
rereleased every autumn. It has all the details on
the region’s vineyards, grapes, growers and
vintages you need. Inside Burgundy: The Côte
de Beaune, £14.99; bbr-press.com
Fresh air for audio ↑If high-end audio is to entice music lovers away
from cheap swill (some might point to ‘iPod
docks’) and back into serious components,
traditional manufacturers have to learn about
non-geek sex appeal. Enter UK maker Roksan’s
new Oxygene line. The integrated amplifier and
CD player are housed in sleek, single-piece
casting cases with the same 12in x 12in
dimensions as an LP sleeve, and only a mere
2.3in thick. Cool functions include soft-touch
commands, such as running one’s fingers
across the surface to change the volume;
a Bluetooth connection; and an alphanumeric
display peeping through the perforations.
Amplifier priced at £3,000 and CD player
at £2,500; roksan.co.uk
Loud and clear ↑Wilson Audio has squeezed all the virtues
of its Alexandria XLF speakers into the
new Alexia loudspeakers, at roughly 25 per
cent of the cost. Alexia is a more compact
version, at a height of 1.35mm tall, 387mm
wide and 537mm deep. And as with other
Wilson models, you can specify just about any
colour you like, from eye-searing Lamborghini
orange or yellow, to subdued metallic hues such
as titanium. But don’t try to install them yourself
– they weigh 116kg apiece. £48,000;
absolutesounds.com
Keep your head upThe alpine experience enters the
realms of sci-fi with the world’s
first graphic information display for
goggles, from Recon Instruments.
The groundbreaking Micro Optics
Display (MOD) delivers crisp data
crucial to your journey around the
mountain directly onto your Recon-
ready goggles, where the MOD Live
sits unobtrusively inside the frame.
Using built-in GPS and a suite of
sensors, speed, vertical descent,
airtime, navigation, temperature
and distance statistics are delivered
via a micro-LCD widescreen that
doesn’t impair your view. When
synchronised with a smartphone,
you can see calls and texts, and its
playlist mode offers a soundtrack
to your adventures. Around £250;
reconinstruments.com
beAumonde | neWS20
A beautiful game ↑
Created from wood used to replicate the
sound and feel of original Middle Eastern
backgammon boards, Alexandra
Llewellyn’s visually stunning designs
feature fine geometry and beautiful hand
crafted pieces. Graphics available range
from ‘peacock’ or ‘pheasant’ on walnut,
‘palm’ on natural laurel burr and ‘black and
white feathers’ on maple. It’s also worth
noting that Alexandra takes one-off
commissions for game tables and boards,
so if you really want to push the boat out
this season, have a think about that
bespoke poker table you’ve always wanted.
£2,100; alexandralldesign.com
Face facts ↑For €980, some might argue, you could buy an
actual watch, but that’s the price just for a book
about one. But when the subject is one of the
most coveted timepieces in the world, enthusiasts
are unlikely to blink at the cost. The 2,000-edition
Rolex Daytona Story is authored by two of the
greatest authorities on the subject, Osvaldo
Patrizzi and Guido Mondani, and this dual-
language book (English and Italian, of course),
measuring 310mm x 410mm, its 276 pages
covering every detail a connoisseur could want.
€980; mondanionline.com
beAumonde | FooTWeAR22
If François Hollande is to follow tradition as French president, then he will soon be paying a visit to JM Weston. Giscard d’Estaing, Chirac, Mitterand and Sarkozy all went there to be shod. For, despite its rather Anglo name, JM Weston, which recently opened on London’s Jermyn Street, is a French footwear institution – the Gallic answer to John Lobb, perhaps.
The company was established in 1891 by Édouard Blanchard in Limoges, then, in 1922, his son Eugène registered the JM Weston name, with business partner Jean Viard – in homage to Weston, USA, where Blanchard Jr learned Goodyear welting – and the brand was born. By the Sixties it was part of the fabric of Parisian style, the so-called ‘Bande du Drugstore’ hipsters adopting its moccasin as a signature look and, in 1974, was bought by Jean-Louis Descours, putting it on the global expansion path.
But arguably, while certain of its styles have become minor classics – its Hunt Derby or its calfskin Chelsea boot, for example – it was with the appointment of Michel Perry as artistic director 10 years ago that JM Weston stepped into the limelight. Perry, aka ‘King of the High Heel’, is the shoe designer who made stilettos quirky with his own label, launched in 1987. ‘Although I design men’s shoes for JM Weston I still make shoes for women – it’s the best way to get close to them,’ says the cheeky 60-year-old. ‘You can seduce a woman by having a sense of humour or by making shoes. And I’m no comic. It’s the heels, you see – they put a woman on a pedestal…’
Meet the French designer shaking up the luxury shoe trade with his contemporary take on handmade classics
Gallic
tread
With JM Weston, Perry has given what are essentially traditional styles a more avant-garde gloss. Its new Eton collection, for example, with its Oxford, loafer and buckled Derby styles, is nothing to scare the horses, but has some je
ne sais quoi in the sweeping lines that makes it distinctly Gallic. While last year, JM Weston inaugurated a corporate foundation to maintain artisanal shoemaking skills, Perry also had the company team up with the likes of Maison Kitsuné to devise a capsule collection, and with artist André Saraiva to make a short film on shoes. In other words, he’s taking some of the stuffing out of the venerably traditional to find something more of its own style.
‘Your own style should show who you really are, rather than adhere to convention,’ Perry reflects. ‘You can express rebellion with society while being respectful. Punks can be charming. Style is important. It’s a way of seducing people – and we all need to seduce people every day.’
It may be a point of debate whether men’s shoes do for women what women’s shoes can do for men: for women, men’s shoes seem to be more indicators of hygiene and upstandingness. But Perry is all for extending your chances. The collection now includes casual styles – a suede Derby on a rubber sole, for example, or a suede trainer/shoe hybrid – and attaché cases, briefcases and more approachable satchels. Expect ‘man of the people’ Hollande to be carrying one of those soon, too. 60 Jermyn Street, London SW1; jmweston.com
Words Josh Sims
bench mARk
Clockwise from left: Look from the Eton collection 2012; Wingtip Derby, £585; Moccasin, £555; Buckle Derby, £590, all from the new collection
generational shift
The new Range Rover, which will be on the road
in spring 2013; the original 1970 model
beaumonde | motoring24
Simply shedding such a vast amount of weight
has resulted in significant benefits in acceleration,
fuel economy, handling and aerodynamics. In the
longer term, it should make the car cheaper to
maintain (less wear on such things as brakes
and tyres) and will help to reduce CO2 emissions
over its lifespan.
While the new body is both lower and longer
than that of the old car, it is unmistakably that of
a Range Rover descended directly from the much-
loved original penned by the late Charles Spencer
King more than 40 years ago. Land Rover chief
designer Gerry McGovern and his team have
fulfilled the decidedly tricky challenge posed by
the car’s international fan base to ‘make it
better without changing it’.
It has changed, of course, and changed a
lot. It’s better looking, for a start, and the extra
length makes for extra comfort and wider doors
for easier access. The interior’s had an extreme
makeover, too, with a touch-screen infotainment
panel absorbing much of the switchgear to leave
a cleaner, sleeker dashboard, while the rear
passenger area can be specified in an executive
configuration which replaces the third, middle
seat with a centre console.
More agricultural types, however, will want
to fold the back seats down and make use of the
ensuing cavernous load space – farmers could
get a couple of ewes in there, no problem.
Well, not free exactly, but the new
Range Rover’s versatility does
give its owner a huge sense
of liberty on and off the road
Free Range
Only from behind the wheel do you get to discover
what a true revelation this car really is. With the
most powerful engine option – a monster,
supercharged, five-litre V8 – the new Range
Rover will sprint from a standstill to 60mph in
less than six seconds and top-out at 155mph.
There are also non-supercharged petrol and diesel
V8s, plus a frugal three-litre V6 which is claimed
to be capable of returning more than 40mpg.
On the road, any of the above translate into
an effortless gentleman’s express with a limo-
like ride, which makes the Range Rover’s
remarkable off-road ability seem all the more
implausible. The electronic Terrain Response
System introduced on the old model (a knurled
knob which can be toggled between a variety
of different settings from ‘snow and ice’ to ‘mud
and ruts’ and ‘rock crawl’) is now even more
sophisticated thanks to an ‘auto’ mode which
leaves the car to do the thinking for you.
And, judging from the way it performed on
dirt tracks, sand dunes, river beds and boulder
trails during the launch in Morocco, it enables
the thing to go just about anywhere.
So think again: around £70,000 for
a sports car, limousine, load lugger, rolling
drawing room and mountain goat ? That’s
too good a deal to miss.
From £71,295; landrover.com
Words Simon de Burton
If self-imposed austerity measures are preventing
you from contemplating the purchase of
a new car costing £70,000-plus, a drive in the
new Range Rover might well induce a rethink –
because it should be easy to justify such
a sum for a vehicle that, even before it’s hit the
street, is already being hailed as possibly the
best all-round car ever made.
How so? Because it offers the performance
of a sports car, the comfort of a super-saloon,
the tranquility of a Rolls-Royce, the load-carrying
ability of a van and (if you choose the right engine
option) the sort of fuel economy that previous-
generation Range Rover owners could only have
dreamed of. Oh, and there’s also its useful
ability to wade through three feet of water, keep
on going when the road runs out and pull large
objects behind it without breaking sweat.
Some of these traits have already helped
the Range Rover attain the legendary status it
has enjoyed since the original’s launch in the
summer of 1970. But this latest version, the
fourth generation of the breed and the first all-new
model for a decade, broaches entirely new levels
of driveability, practicality and refinement.
The key to its brilliance – and it is brilliant
– lies in the fact that it’s a whopping 39 per cent
lighter than the outgoing model thanks to the use
of the world’s first, all-aluminium monocoque to
be seen on an SUV.
tailoring | beaumonde 27
If being long-established is considered a
benchmark of quality, might you be dissuaded
from visiting a tailor established in 2002, or
even in the vintage year that was 2012? It is
certainly a long way from the venerability
suggested by, say, Gieves & Hawkes (1771)
or Davies & Son (1803).
‘I think there is a change in attitudes
towards tailoring, especially among younger
consumers,’ argues Clive Darby, formerly of
Kilgour (1882), now of bespoke tailors and
menswear brand Rake (2009). ‘Time was,
a man traditionally went to the same tailor as
his father. But now men are more educated
about clothing and ready to branch out and have
their own requirements met as they see fit. There
is a shift happening: the older houses tend to
have a set cut and a set idea of what they’re doing.
But there’s growing recognition that bespoke
should be led more by the consumer, as in,
what’s best for the person wearing the suit?’
Indeed, a growing band of (relatively
speaking) young tailors are offering a more
contemporary alternative to Savile Row’s big
guns; it is, as it were, going Tommy Nutter
(the tailor who shook up bespoke practices
in the Seventies). Rake, for example, is making
a name for itself online and at Matches, with
tailored separates, still something of a radical
idea in British formal dressing. Spencer Hart,
at 62-64 Brook Street, has its minimalist, jazz
aesthetic. Adrien Sauvage is a stylist-turned-
menswear designer who has recently opened
premises as A Sauvage, at 48 Maddox Street in
Mayfair, to showcase his super-streamlined,
slightly shrunken look. And, similarly, Alexander
McQueen now has its first menswear store, at
9 Savile Row, with a bespoke service that will
see suiting carry the late designer’s signature
pagoda shoulders that exaggerate the classic
masculine V-shaped torso, giving the look
a touch of Ming the Merciless.
In other words, the options for straying off
tailoring’s beaten track towards a style that is,
as they say in fashion, more ‘directional’, less
Downton Abbey, are growing in number. ‘It has
long been an issue with Savile Row, and
younger tailors are now addressing it,’ says
Nick Hart, founder of Spencer Hart. ‘With the
long-established names in tailoring, you get
A new crop of tailors combines
contemporary flair and Savile
Row precision to give British
tailoring an edgier look
Modern
cuts
a garment that is beautiful, well-made and will
last, but it can also be a bit “costume drama”. If
modernity is what you’re after, that look doesn’t
have much to do with the world we live in.’
Hart goes further. He suggests, as does
Darby, that many ‘old-school’ tailors suffer from
a lack of flexibility. They have a house style and
shoulder shape, which they apply ceaselessly.
‘It’s bespoke so, of course, the resulting suit will
fit perfectly,’ says Hart. ‘But that doesn’t mean
it will look good.’ Younger operations, he
counters, take a different tack: a distinctive
over-arching aesthetic, but with multiple
shoulder fits to get whatever works best for the
customer, be that a softening cardigan-type fit
for the bigger man, or a more rigorous line for
the man who needs building up. It’s no longer a
case of ‘one mode suits all’.
There is good reason why this younger
group of tailors is offering something a little
different. Many come from a menswear rather
than a strict tailoring background, ‘so we’ve
seen a lot of takes on the way men dress, the
seasonal changes, its shifts and different
demands,’ explains Hart, ‘and that makes you
concentrate on fulfilling how an overall design
idea, including the trims and the fit, all comes
together. In contrast, traditional tailors tend to
be trained in a particular way for a particular
house and that can be hard to break free of.’
It’s a matter of opinion, perhaps. The only
sure way to find out is to experience it for
yourself, next time a suit is required, and you
must ponder options from companies with their
roots and their thinking in the 18th century or
those with their minds on the 21st.
Words Josh Sims
next generation
From top: Alexander McQueen; A Sauvage;
Spencer Hart; Rake
STOCKISTS DETAILS ON PAGE 66
beAumonde | skiing28
Most chalets look similar from
the outside – but the best have
surprises hidden inside. Would
you prefer a nightclub, a squash
court or a slide to the cellar
Room atthe top
Champagne, concierge, chauffeur, canapés,
chef – sometimes it’s hard to see the good for
the ‘C’s when it comes to choosing a high-end,
high-service mountain rental. And with many
mainstream operators touting, if you will, ‘lacksury’
(substituting lumpfish roe for caviar, Espaces
for Mercs etc), it’s hard to spot a real alpine star.
Some of the latest chalets, however, really stand
out, with unique features…
Chamois Lodge, st martin de bellevilleThe location of this boutique chalet, run by its
owner in the unfashionable but beautiful third of
the Trois Vallées, means a price tag that simply
wouldn’t get you the same space, comfort,
service or quality in Méribel or Courchevel.
Sleeps nine; from £5,212 a week;
thealpineclub.co.uk
ChALet peArLsFrom top: La Folie Blanche’s squash court; the vaulted ceilings of Chalet San Lorenzo; Pook Heli Lodges; a room in Chalet Edelweiss
La Folie blanche, Courchevel Le prazGleaming white interior, including the most
unusual room in the building: a squash court.
Also, unusually, the ‘Freedom to Choose’ option
means you’re not committed financially or
gastrically to a five-course meal every night.
Sleeps eight; from €4,900 a week (excluding
food and drink); alpleisure.com
pook heli Lodges, sainte FoyThe lodges (sleeping six, 14 or 21) are in a
small village in the valley between Bourg St
Maurice and Val d’Isère-Tignes, and near
Sainte Foy and La Rosière, and have a field in
front on which choppers can land. So, uniquely,
these are Canadian-style heli lodges in France.
Sleep six upwards; from £8970 upwards
a week, or £2500pp as a heliski package;
valheliski.com
grande Corniche, Les getsOff-the-beaten track location (in the Portes du
Soleil) and off-kilter design (a glass sauna with
views of the valley; a dining table that, when
you flip a switch, becomes a snooker table; and
a slide from bar to wine cellar).
Sleeps 12; from £14,500 a week;
consensioholidays.co.uk
Chalet san Lorenzo, dolomitesA chalet in Italy (with skiing nearby in the Sella
Ronda) is rare enough; one with a helipad and a
private 18-hole floodlit golf course that’s open
all winter is unique. This 16th-century bishop’s
hunting lodge has been restored by former
Escada fashion house CEO Stefano Barbini.
Sleeps 10; from €21,000 a week;
sanlorenzomountainlodge.com
Chalet marco polo, Val d’isère (Consensio)A resident spa manager runs a pampering
centre that spreads across two floors of
the chalet, with massage and beauty
treatments, hammam, hot tub and sizeable
swimming pool more akin to a hotel’s.
Sleeps 14; from £22,500 a week;
consensioholidays.co.uk
White pearl, Zermatt (oxford ski)The first private chalet in the exclusive Swiss
resort with its own indoor swimming pool. There’s
also a cinema, games room and separate bar.
Sleeps 10; from CHF37,000 a week; oxfordski.com
Chalet edelweiss, Courchevel 1850 Less of a chalet than a winter palace: designed
by Baccarat, with a seven-floor spiral staircase,
it has its own nightclub (and the ability to hire
big-name DJs). For quieter evenings, there is
also a cinema and library.
Sleeps 16; from £159,520 a week;
summitretreats.com
www.hublot.com • twitter.com/hublot • facebook.com/hublot
Classic Fusion Skeleton Tourbillon.
Tourbillon movement, extra-thin skeleton
manufactured in-house by Hublot.
Case in 18K red gold, crafted using a unique
new alloy: King Gold. Sapphire dial.
Black rubber and alligator-skin strap.
Limited edition of 99 pieces.
For a list of Hublot stockists in the UK, please telephone
0207 343 7200 or e-mail [email protected]
THE digiTal E-zinE for THE ciTyBrummell brings you the monthly Brummell e-zine, a carefully
curated selection of exclusive reader events, restaurant openings,
news on style, accessories, motoring, travel, arts and culture
Scan the Qr code below or go to brummellmagazine.net/subscribe
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AFTER THE CITY | BRUMMELL 31
Like many inspired ideas, IN Showjumpers was
conceived around a kitchen table over a good
bottle of wine. The format is simple – talent-spot
young horses with the potential to compete at
the very highest level, buy them untrained, bring
them on and then sell at a substantial profit.
For founder Caroline Wilks it turns out to
be the perfect way to combine a lifelong passion
for horses with the financial acumen garnered
from 15 years in banking, with Royal Bank of
Canada and Bank of Bermuda.
‘Showjumping is undergoing something of a
resurgence,’ says Wilks. ‘It’s now a vibrant
industry, rather like racing was 30 years ago.’
Emerging nations are galloping into the
sport, investing heavily in European expertise.
The Saudis are said to have spent more than
£25m on showjumpers alone in the run up to
the Olympics; the Ukrainians have recently
spent up to £19m on jumpers and the Chinese
are known to be investing heavily, too.
Showjumping is undergoing
something of a resurgence and
is now a vibrant industry, rather
like racing was 30 years ago
It helps that the sport’s glamour factor is also in
the ascendancy, pursued by celebrities such as
Bruce Springsteen’s daughter, Jessica, who
spent a small fortune buying one of Team GB’s
gold-medal winning horses, Murka’s Vindicat W.
But if you can buy a horse for less than
£1m, then sell it three years later for £5m, as
the owners of top UK showjumper Carlo 273
have, why isn’t everyone doing it?
‘Most of the top competitors don’t have the
capital to buy the best young horses,’ explains
Wilks. ‘Even if they do, weekly expenses can be
£200 or more so there is often a lack of cash to
keep the horse and bring it on. And up until now
there has been no way for anyone other than
industry insiders and well-informed enthusiasts
to provide third-party investment.’
Wilks’ son Tim, an aspiring showjumper,
trains with top professional Duncan Inglis, and
it was while chatting with Inglis and his business
partner, gold-medal winning Olympic trainer
Henk Nooren, that she saw a gap in the market.
‘I introduced the idea of opening up a fund
so that Duncan and Henk could fully develop
their programme to bring on young horses.’
They set up IN Showjumpers in 2010 with
the aim of finding horses aged from six to nine
and costing between £150,000 and £600,000.
With their first round of funding, they purchased
and brought on eight horses. Four have been
sold, with an average return of 82 per cent
after expenses; two more sales are imminent.
As Wilks puts it: ‘It’s so much better value than
being tied up in a racehorse syndicate.’
There is also less risk involved than with
racehorses. Showjumpers don’t compete at the
same speeds and tend to jump on even,
man-made surfaces, which means less jarring
on the legs. However, to safeguard its
investments, each animal it buys is insured.
The scheme has been given Enterprise
Investment Scheme pre-approval and in
partnership with RAM Capital Partners, Wilks
has initiated a campaign to raise the next round
of funding – the target being £3.5m.
Although not involved in identifying horses
to buy – that is left to Inglis and Nooren – Wilks
is hands-on in almost every other area of the
business, including registering the horses,
overseeing purchases and sales, and paying
farriers’ bills. Her private client experience, as
well as her tax expertise, have left her well
equipped to handle the corporate aspects of the
enterprise. She even rides the horses every
now and again: ‘It means I know the business
inside out,’ she says, adding sagely, ‘but no
jumping – I don’t leave the ground any more!’
inshowjumpers.com
Caroline Wilks traded in a
career in banking to set up an
equestrian investment venture
that’s already paying dividends
Words Eloise Napier
Photography Ivan Jones
Horsepower
Performance cars have much in common with the
best watches: engineering excellence combined with
aesthetic grace. Here the two worlds come together
words Simon de Burton Photography Andy Barter
Motor
wrists
watches | BRUMMeLL 33
dRive tiMeClockwise, from far left: GMT,
Bell for BMW; GTo 1962 Bizzarrini edition, ScAlfAro;
f1 King Power Great Britain, HuBloT; Monaco calibre 12,
TAG Heuer; AMVoX7, JAeGer-lecoulTre; Grand Prix
de Monaco Historique, cHoPArd
Hand-stitched Bridge of Weir luxmill leather car seat from the
one-77, in a limited edition of 77, £1.2 million, ASTon MArTin;
astonmartin.com
Ball For BMW GMTBMW has linked up with the Ball Watch
Company, which takes its name from Webb C
Ball, who devised the first universal timing
system for America’s railroads following the
infamous Kipton disaster of 1891, when two
locomotives collided. Ball’s initial efforts for BMW
are a time and date watch, a power-reserve model
and this GMT version with an additional time zone
display. Highlights in BMW ‘Inka orange’ give the
piece a sporty look, and the 42mm steel case also
comes in a black, DLC coating option, as shown.
After dark, the dial is lit up by micro gas tubes
that glow 100 times brighter than luminous
coatings and will remain functional for 25 years.
£3,670; ballwatch.com
Hublot F1 King Power Great BritainAmong Hublot’s many alliances, which include
partnerships with Ferrari, Manchester United,
Maradona and Usain Bolt, is the one brokered
with Bernie Ecclestone in 2010 to make Hublot
the official watch of Formula One. Following limited
editions to mark the Grands Prix of Abu Dhabi,
Japan, Brazil and India, this watch commemorates
the 2012 British Grand Prix at Silverstone. It’s
being made in a 250-piece edition with a case
of ‘King Gold’ which combines gold with copper
and platinum for a redder hue. Automotive
imagery includes a carbon-fibre and ceramic
bezel inspired by a brake disc, the F1 logo on
the dial and a rubber-lined, alligator strap.
£31,500; hublot.com
Jaeger-LeCoultre AMVOX7Jaeger-LeCoultre hit the road with Aston Martin
back in 2004 with the AMVOX1, a variation
on the much loved Memovox alarm model. The
AMVOX2 was far more radical, featuring a
chronograph mechanism started and stopped
by pushing on the crystal, instead of conventional
buttons. The latest AMVOX, number seven
(there were no numbers four or six, incidentally)
reprises this so-called ‘vertical trigger’ system
but adds a power reserve indicator in the form of
two red discs near the 12 o’clock numeral that
gradually disappear as the watch winds down.
It has a titanium case and a dial based on the
grille of Aston’s new flagship Vanquish.
£17,400; jaeger-lecoultre.com
TAG Heuer Monaco Caliber 12In a list of top car watches, TAG Heuer’s square-
cased Monaco must be close to number one.
Immortalised when Steve McQueen wore one as
Porsche-driving Michael Delaney in the 1971
film Le Mans, the model was revived in 1998 after
a two-decade hiatus and has since been made
available in dozens of different designs. McQueen’s
had a distinctive left-hand winding crown, which
is again available on versions fitted with TAG
Heuer’s Calibre 11 movement. The Monaco shown
here uses the less expensive Calibre 12, but still
sports the all-important ‘McQueen blue’ dial.
One of the Monacos actually worn by the star in
Le Mans recently fetched $800,000 at auction.
£4,450; tagheuer.com
Chopard Grand Prix de Monaco HistoriqueSince 2002, Chopard has backed the biennial
Grand Prix de Monaco Historique, for which it
traditionally produces a dedicated, limited-edition
chronograph. This year’s evokes the Seventies
with a matte grey dial highlighted with contrasting
orange or blue detailing and a distressed,
perforated leather strap. The 42mm case is
available in titanium (pictured, £4,870),
titanium/rose gold (limited to 500 examples
priced at £7,190) or rose gold only (around
£12,000, limited to 100). The back of each
watch is engraved with the legend ‘Grand Prix
de Monaco Historique’ and carries the logo of
the Automobile Club de Monaco.
From £4,870; chopard.com
Scalfaro GTO 1962 Bizzarrini EditionTo mark 50 years of the Ferrari 250 GTO, of
which only 39 were produced between 1962
and 1964, German-based watch brand Scalfaro
is making a limited run of 250 chronographs
with cases incorporating genuine parts from
Pink Floyd drummer and car fanatic Nick Mason’s
250 GTO. The 250 GTO’s designer Giotto
Bizzarrini has lent his signature to the watches,
each of which has a rubber strap stamped with
the firing order of the GTO’s three-litre, V12
engine. The side of the case bears the word
‘Omologato’ in purple (the car was intended as a
homologation model for racing and Enzo Ferrari
signed his name in purple ink).
€7,950; scalfaro-gto.com
BRUMMELL | WATCHES34
MAKERS OF THE WORLD’S FINEST SPORTING GUNS AND RIFLES
NEW YORK
+1 212 752 7755
LONDON
+44 207 499 4411
www.hollandandholland.com
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Jazzmaster auto Chrono
PROMOTIONal feaTuRe | BRuMMell 37
th
e
sp
ir
it
of
om
eg
a
Omega is defined by its pioneering spirit.
The brand has participated in some of the most
challenging adventures in human history: providing
timepieces for the conquest of space, creating
the first divers’ watch in 1932 and providing
world-class sports timekeeping, including for
25 Olympic Games. Brummell brings you the
highlights, in association with The Royal Exchange
Words Rob Ryan
The Omega Speedmaster was the first watch on
the moon – and the one that saved astronauts’ lives
Omega has long been a company interested in exploring the edges of human experience. From its innovative introduction of the first divers’ watch in 1932, through developing ever more accurate ways of sports timing, to the ongoing adventures of the sun-powered, gossamer-winged Solar Impulse aircraft, Omega’s products have gone where no timepieces have gone before. And no watch better encapsulates the true envelope-pushing spirit of Omega than the Speedmaster Professional, the First Watch On The Moon.
The Speedmaster was introduced in 1957, as a sports and racing chronograph to complement Omega’s position as the official Olympic Timekeeper. But five years later, Wally Schirra wore a Speedmaster on his trip into Space, aboard Mercury-Atlas 8. The watch was unofficial – ‘astronaut’s own’, as they say in photo credits – but subsequently NASA decided it needed an ultra-reliable official
mission chronograph. A series of brutal ‘proving’ tests were instigated, including subjecting various watches to low temperatures, oxygen saturation, high and low pressure, vibration and acceleration. Several brands were put through this extra-terrestrial wringer: the Omega Speedmaster came out victorious and, in March 1965, Gus Grissom and John Young wore the first official NASA ‘flight-qualified’ watches on Gemini 3. Then, months later, came a true pioneering moment: the Speedmaster, strapped to wrist of Ed White of Gemini 4, left the capsule for a space walk.
That EVA (extra-vehicular activity) alone would have guaranteed the Speedmaster a place in the history of space exploration, but the watch had much further to go. It was part of all the Apollo missions, including number 11. So, on 21 July 1969 at 02:56 GMT, it was taken onto the surface of the moon. But not by Neil Armstrong, who took man’s first steps there.
pioneering
spirit
BRUMMELL | pRoMotionaL fEatURE38
Being a watch guy, I decided to
strap the Speedmaster around
the outside of my bulky spacesuit
He had left his Speedmaster in the Lunar Module, because that craft’s own timer had malfunctioned. The Omega stepped into the breech. But Buzz Aldrin (pictured) opted to take his down the steps: ‘Few things are less necessary when walking around on the moon than knowing what time it is in Houston, Texas. Nonetheless, being a watch guy, I decided to strap the Speedmaster onto my right wrist around the outside of my bulky spacesuit.’ One small tick for a watch, one giant tock for watchkind.
The Speedmaster’s adventures continued, not least during Apollo 13, when accurate timing was crucial to the astronauts’ survival. It has also been worn onboard the Space Shuttle, Skylab, Soyuz and the International Space Station. Nothing, as yet, has quite matched the iconic moments of the Speedmaster’s first EVA and moonwalk. Although, as Omega will doubtless tell you, there is always Mars. Pioneers, you see, never stop pioneering.
BRUMMELL | PROMOTIONaL fEaTURE40
Omega released its first dedicated watch for divers, the Marine, in 1932. This was incredibly prescient as, at the time, diving was a highly specialised business: it wasn’t until post-World War II that recreational Scuba took off. In fact, the Seamaster, Omega’s most famous dive watch, first introduced in 1948, has its roots in the war – it is the direct descendent of the robust, waterproof timepieces Omega made for the British military, including the Special Boat Service (which later used Seamasters on its covert missions in the Sixties and Seventies).
Early Seamasters did not look like today’s version. We can trace back the roots of the modern models, still favoured by sailors, soldiers and divers, to the 1957 Omega Automatic Seamaster 300. It was guaranteed down to 200m, but called the 300 because it functioned well beyond the range of testing equipment at that time (some of today’s models scoff at 600m). With its seahorse logo on the rear, and its rotating bezel and luminous numerals and hand-tips, it incorporated all the features we expect from a modern Seamaster. Alain Julien, a French commercial diver of the time, said: ‘The Seamasters are of extraordinary solidarity. Despite the shocks of often extreme brutality, the cold water, and the great depths at which we work, they remained of an astonishing robustness and precision.’
Everything Julien said more than five decades ago is true today – Omega is proud of its diving heritage, and the current Seamasters, including the Aqua Terra and Planet Ocean models, continue a tradition of combining remarkable resilience and reliability under extreme conditions with understated elegance. Why do you think James Bond wears one?
The Special Boat Service used
Seamasters on covert missions
in the Sixties and Seventies
DEPTH OF
sPiriTFor both professional divers and
Scuba enthusiasts, the Omega
Seamaster has become an icon
BRUMMELL | PROMOTIONaL fEaTURE42
It was women who first adopted the wristwatch. In Victorian and Edwardian times, men favoured pocket watches; women wore elaborate timepieces on their wrists that doubled as jewellery. In the trenches of World War I, soldiers realised the convenience of the wristwatch and it became the norm for men, while women moved from the mostly ornamental to the practical. Some companies cleverly combined the latter two attributes – the striking Ladies’ Omega Medicus of 1937, with T-bar lugs and a clear, uncluttered dial, is a beauty. Later, Omega skilfully matched grace and accuracy with its Ladymatic line. First introduced in 1955, it was an early example of a self-winding watch designed specifically for women, and the original Ladymatic featured the tiniest state-of-the-art automatic movement the company had ever produced. They were handsome pieces into the bargain, until production ceased some years ago.
However, with the ladies’ wristwatch staging a strong sartorial revival, the Ladymatic is back. Like its earlier namesake, the Omega Ladymatic combines drop-dead gorgeous looks – albeit of a more contemporary kind - with the most advanced technology. It is powered by Omega’s Co-Axial movement, visible through the sapphire-crystal caseback window, housed in beautifully proportioned 34mm cases in 18ct red or yellow gold or stainless steel, with a choice of polished or snow-set diamond-paved bezels. A perfect blend of fashion and function – each one is an officially certified chronometer – the Ladymatic is a forward-looking nod to another, more elegant, time.
The original Ladymatic featured
the tiniest automatic movement
Omega had ever produced
feminine
spiritWomen were wristwatch pioneers,
so Omega has long created timepieces
that match accuracy with grace
BRUMMELL | PROMOTIONaL fEaTURE44
Sporting SpiritFrom the 1932 Olympics to London 2012 and beyond, Omega has been
at the forefront of timing technology, recording ever greater feats
The Olympic motto of ‘Citius, Altius, Fortius’ – faster, higher, stronger – applies to many sports. Humans are going further, quicker and with more power. The trick, as we reach the outer limits of sporting performance, is how to measure accurately the tiny increments by which elite athletes are sometimes breaking records, and there is no sporting occasion where this is more crucial than the Olympic Games (particularly in the swimming pool and on the athletics track). Which is where Omega comes in.
Omega first went to the Games as Official Timekeeper in Los Angeles in 1932. It took with it 30 stopwatches, able, for the first time, to record to one-tenth of a second. The Games after that was in Berlin, where Jesse Owens, who thrilled the world – Hitler excepted - with his magnificent time of 10.3 seconds (he had
run 10.2 seconds in the quarter finals, but that was wind-assisted) in the 100m.
And then came London in 1948 and a genuine sporting breakthrough. Although it had debuted at the St Moritz winter games, this was the first time a ‘Magic Eye’ – an innovative piece of equipment developed by the Race Finishing Recording Company – was used in athletics. It was linked to photoelectric cell timing by Omega. The system proved its worth immediately, as this new ‘photo-finish technology’ decided the winner of the men’s 100m (above), and the women’s 80m hurdles and the 4 x 100m relay.
Omega’s timekeeping has made many important strides since then. The Swim Eight-O-Matic Timer, the world’s first semi-automatic swimming timer, was first used at Melbourne in 1956; ‘touch pads’ for swimmers
to stop their own clocks were introduced in 1968 in Mexico City; and in 1972 a new improved Swim’O’Matic timer was introduced, accurate to a thousandth of a second. In 1984, pressure-sensitive devices to detect false starts were introduced in both swimming and athletics.
For London 2012, Omega’s 25th Games, the company shipped in an estimated 400 tons of equipment, linked by 180km of cabling. Some 450 professional timekeepers and data handlers were on hand, many checking a photo-finish system that was considerably more sensitive than the 1948 model. It also used the Quantum Timer - able to detect differences of one-millioneth of a second. It was a timing triumph. And next? Sochi 2014– when it will doubtless be a case of faster, higher, stronger and yet more accurate. The sporting legacy continues.
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BRUMMELL | DiaMonDs46
Ring MastERs
From top: Matchless diamond jewellery from Cartier, Graff and De Beers
Exquisite gemstones hold a magical allure for those who collect them. Each stone has its own history, from the rare geological forces that formed it deep within the earth, to the stories of those that have worn and loved it in its past. For generations, exclusive jewellery was traditionally purchased as a gift of love or passion and would be handed down to successive generations. But in recent years, the number of people who are choosing to invest in rare stones has risen as gemstones are increasingly regarded as a prestigious investment opportunity.
Rare large diamonds in particular are attracting record-beating prices. In November, a huge internally flawless diamond sold in Geneva for a record CHF20.35m (£13.5m). This rare white stone was a heavyweight sparkler, at a massive 3ct, roughly the size of a large strawberry. From India’s fabled Golconda mines, it once belonged to Archduke Joseph August of Austria, so had royal provenance in its favour as well as sheer magnitude. What makes this particular diamond auction so interesting is that it fetched more than double the price paid for it almost two decades ago, making it a world-record price per carat for a white, or colourless, diamond.
In the same week, Sotheby’s brought down the hammer after heated and lengthy bidding on a flawless blue diamond which had been estimated to fetch CHF3.2m to CHF4.2m. It sold for an astounding CHF10.27m (£7.26m). London diamond magnate Laurence Graff, who was bidding by telephone, bought the 10.48ct drop-shaped stone and as the hammer closed the deal, the room exploded into a round of applause.
David Bennett, head of Sotheby’s international jewellery department, says this was a world-record price per carat for a deep blue diamond. ‘It’s an extraordinary stone,
Some Forbes 400 types are
investing up to $100m in the
diamond market, mainly buying
up large, polished stones
a very, very mystical deep blue and these coloured diamonds only come from one place: the Cullinan mine in South Africa.’
According to Mark Emanuel, of American jewellers David Webb, the blue diamond will most probably be recut. ‘It’s an extremely rare 10ct deep blue briolette that can be recut to a 7ct vivid blue,’ he explains. ‘Most of these diamonds are bought on the basis of speculating and re-cutting. That’s why we come. As diamond dealers we look at the potential of a stone and, at this level of business, the very, very best of coloured stones and the very, very best of diamonds has almost no limit in market value.’
Such prices at auction are fuelling a growing amount of interest and expectation in the value of diamonds themselves. The prices for 3ct diamonds have surged by 238 per cent, while the figure for 1ct diamonds has risen by 88.9 per cent since 2001.
According to the Rapaport Diamond Price Statistics Annual Report, every $1,000 spent on a 5ct diamond 10 years ago would have returned around $1,645 today. In these terms, diamond investments have outpaced returns in the yen, euro and Nasdaq or Dow Jones.
Big diamonds are regarded as the stones to invest in, especially those of five carats or above, along with rare natural-coloured diamonds. It has been said that for every natural-coloured diamond, there are some
Until recently, diamond dealers have inhabited a
rarified world but the precious gems are
now finding their way into investment portfolios
Words Sarah Carpin
Stone
circles
10,000 colourless stones. And to mine just one colourless diamond at a quality able to be used within jewellery, a diamond miner would typically have to unearth enough rubble to fill a three-bedroomed house.
Henri Barguirdjian, CEO of Graff Diamonds, says interest in diamonds as an investment is a fairly new phenomenon: ‘We are being approached by wealthy clients who are considering investing a small percentage of their portfolio in diamonds,’ he says. ‘This is something we have never seen in the past. These people never considered diamonds as an investment. They considered them as something very beautiful and nice to own, that made their wives happy and were gorgeous to look at, but they always neglected the financial aspect of the transaction. And now they see what has happened with the price of diamonds and they realise it is not such a silly idea.’ As a result, he says, some Forbes 400 types are investing up to $100m in the diamond market, mainly buying up large, polished stones.
Martin Rapaport, whose diamond indexes are used as a reference in the industry, says it’s time for diamonds to become more investable. But he warns potential investors to be cautious. He says normal investors have ‘no access to the market’, and the bid/ask spread for items is ‘crazy’.
‘Let’s say you have a diamond you inherited from your grandmother,’ he suggests. ‘Your ability to get a good price for that diamond would be a lot less than mine because I have more access to buyers and sellers and traders.’
The complexity of diamond pricing is one of the toughest obstacles to overcome. Understanding and evaluating each of a diamond’s four C’s — cut, clarity, colour and carat — make standardised pricing very difficult. And grading of diamonds is often really rather subjective.
There are processes, laboratories and reports that can grade and price diamonds, most notably the GIA (Gemological Institute of America), but large diamonds are often worth more than the sum of their parts. It will also depend on provenance, rarity, or whether it is a loose stone or mounted in a collectable piece from a distinguished jewellery house. The most collectable vintage jewellery is from historic jewellery houses such as Cartier, Van Cleef & Arpels, Chaumet and Boucheron, while the most exquisite stones cut to perfection and set in more contemporary styles from Graff, Harry Winston and De Beers are also in high demand.
‘The greatest art form in the world is the transition of a natural rough crystal into a perfect polished diamond,’ says Laurence Graff. Collecting diamonds is more akin to collecting art than stockpiling gold bullion and diamond collectors such as Graff are driven to purchase rare stones predominantly in a quest for perfection and the rarest of the rare.
Most importantly, for many who work in the diamond industry, diamonds have a mystical romance and emotional pull. Stephen Lussier, chief executive of the De Beers company Forevermark, says: ‘Every diamond is a unique miracle of nature and the emotional content of diamond jewellery is most critical,’ he says. ‘We prefer our customers to buy diamond jewellery to keep, not to trade.’
Harry Winston was said to walk around with diamonds in his pockets, feeling their shape and allowing time for the stones themselves to give him inspiration for their settings. Many designers, setters and cutters within the world’s great jewellery houses would understand this all too well. Some diamonds simply have a magical feel to them. It goes beyond value: it is the fire and scintillation within the stone itself that communicates, and the very best jewellery houses have the skills and artistry to let these miracles of nature shine out from works of art set within fine gold or platinum.
It can also sometimes take years to find matching diamonds of the same size, colour and quality to make a necklace or pair of earrings, followed by months of painstaking work by master craftsman to turn rough stones into polished diamonds, and loose stones into a final, exquisite, piece of jewellery. This is a powerful argument for the world’s most perfect diamonds and works of haute joiallerie to be worn and celebrated, not simply locked away in dark bank vaults as emotionless financial investments.
graffdiamonds.com; harrywinston.com; debeers.co.uk
BRUMMELL | DIAMONDS48
jEwEL pERSONALIty
From top: Exquisitely crafted rings from Cartier, Harry Winston, Graff and De Beers
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light entertainment
Aurora Borealis, the star of the show in Abisko in Swedish Lapland, lives up to its promise
Far above the Arctic Circle, the village of Abisko at Sweden’s furthest reaches
is the best place on earth to see the Northern Lights, and the rush is on
Words Ian Belcher Pictures Doug McKinlay
Northernexposure
BrUmmell | traVel50
So this is what it’s like to be big in Japan. Stellar. Stratospheric. A showbiz deity. As rumours of the iconic star’s presence crackle around our hotel, the Tokyo tour party enters a state of heightened rapture. Having travelled across eight time zones to reach Swedish Lapland their hysteria is intensified by brutal jet lag.
Rushing outside into the oily black night, they stumble around, rubber-necked and wide-eyed, pointing to the sky. It’s -33˚C. Nobody cares. They bump into one another, tread on toes, knock over camera tripods. A man slips and lies on his back in the snow, gesturing to the heavens, mouth opening and shutting like a dying fish. It’s carnage.
The star doesn’t disappoint. After a scene-stealing entrance, igniting the sky with three emerald arcs of light, he re-emerges as a giant serpent, his tail dripping into a molten pool on the horizon. An hour later, after a series of dazzling costume changes, he takes his final bow in the form of three vast burning globules – a super-sized, other-worldly lava lamp. Thank you and good night.
It’s not always this way, of course. A-list celebrities are, by nature, temperamental and this one, the Aurora Borealis, can be particularly fickle. One friend has now made three trips to the Arctic without a sniff of a high-altitude autograph.
But all that could change this winter. A peak in the sun’s 11-year cycle – a ‘solar maximum’ – guarantees the Aurora will be intensely active, dazzlingly bright and happy to make regular photocalls.
And when they do, there are few better places on earth than Abisko. Lying 195km into the Arctic Circle, at 68.2 degrees north, it provides long dark viewing nights untainted by light or industrial pollution.
That puts it on a par with other northern-hemisphere hotspots. What pushes it ahead of the pack is a slice of geographical luck. The tiny hamlet sits in the eastern shadow of Mounts Slattatjåkka and Nuolja, protected from North Atlantic fronts, and on the shore of Lake Torneträsk – a position that allows it to boast Sweden’s clearest, driest weather.
‘We call it the Abisko blue hole,’ says Putte Eby, former manager of the Abisko Mountain Lodge. ‘Go a few kilometres either side and there’s more than double the rain and snow. Relatively it’s a desert. Add in our accessibility with the railway and road, and this is the best place in the world to see the Aurora Borealis.’
It sounds impressive, but the sensible Japanese don’t rely on local hyperbole. They make more rigorous checks. NHK, the national broadcasting corporation, sent crews around the planet to find the ultimate place to see the polar lights, climaxing in a head-to-head TV finale, Abisko v Antarctica. An incredible 17 million tuned in. Abisko took gold with a widescreen technicolour show-stopper. ‘That’s when I knew God was a Lutheran,’ says Putte, over a shot of schnapps. ‘You can’t buy marketing like that.’
BRUMMELL | tRavEL52
Japanese interest is hard to fathom. Certainly Yukari, Maiko and Shinya can’t explain their obsession as they warm their fingers in front of the Lodge’s fire. Sex clearly plays a part. Or at least insemination. Some Japanese believe babies conceived under the Aurora Borealis will grow into future geniuses. Just about every Laplander knows of the incident, 120 miles away in Gållivare, when a surprised snowmobile driver hit an entwined Japanese couple displaying high passion and extraordinary blood flow in the Arctic night.
But child geniuses are only one potential outcome of the lights. Folklore also credits the heavenly theatre as a reflection of vast shoals of herring, and a divine portent of war. They’re even said to be the result of ancestral spirits playing football with walrus skulls.
I trust the more prosaic scientists who attribute the Northern Lights to solar winds destabilising and energising particles in the earth’s outer atmosphere. As these zip towards the poles along our magnetic fields, they smack into atoms of gas, releasing energy – the Aurora.
For closer scrutiny of the phenomenon I catch Sweden’s chilliest chairlift to the summit of Mount Nuolja, home of the cosy Aurora Sky Station and rooftop viewing tower. I’m here for the night. Almost 1,000m closer to the gods, the mercury plummets further and faster. Frost rapidly coats my eyelashes but that doesn’t prevent me witnessing another mesmerising performance. At one point, the huge canopy of sky drips with tentacles of light, as if a giant astral jellyfish is swaddling the earth.
After a night’s kip in front of a glowing stove, I awake to the brittle glare of sun on snow. If last night was all about looking up, now it’s about looking down – and it’s seriously impressive. A Nordic giant appears to have bitten into the Abisko Alps, creating the valley of Lapporten. Far below lies frozen Lake Torneträsk, with distant peaks wrapped in ethereal mist. I feel a poem coming on.
Actually, that’s a lie. I feel exhilarating sub-zero exercise coming on and after snowshoeing the first stretch of the famous 425km Kungsleden Trail, I enjoy a scorching bake in a century-old lakeside cabin - surely one of Sweden’s most beautiful saunas – followed by a night in the Icehotel. Despite the serene beauty of its chapel and bar the sub-zero rooms carry a scent of sweaty humanity and processed tourism.
Returning to the Lodge, I meet Maiko and Shinya, who, it turns out, are honeymooners. Tragically, they missed the dramatic northern lights they’d travelled half way around the world to see. They’d been sleeping, apparently. If that’s a newlyweds’ euphemism, then I truly hope they find some compensation in the shape of Japan’s next child genius.
A three-night Northern Lights trip, including stays in the Abisko Mountain Station and Icehotel, flights and transfers costs from £1,233; 01737 214 251; discover-the-world.co.uk
oUtER LiMits
From top: sauna shed; the Lapporten valley viewed from the Aurora Sky Station; the Lights seen from the rooftop viewing tower
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STOCKISTS DETAILS
ON PAGE 66
The world’s most beautiful vintage cars gather each year for
the Mille Miglia rally, loved by drivers and bystanders alike
Words Charlotte Metcalf Photography Nick Dimbleby
Grazie mille‘Che bella!’ shrieked a cluster of women as our
1954 R-Type Continental Bentley purred by.
The car’s sleek, cream curves drew coos of
admiration and squeals of delight wherever we
went, clearly evoking a nostalgic yearning for
that long-gone vision of Italy, made so
irresistibly glamorous by Fellini, Sophia Loren
and Audrey Hepburn. Luxuriously ensconced in
its sumptuous leather back seat, I waved
enthusiastically at the cheering crowds. At
the wheel was Stéphanie-Rose, assistant to
Bentley’s director of communications. A pretty,
diminutive blonde in diamanté designer
sunglasses and red leather Bentley driving
gloves, she received her own share of applause
skilfully steering the heavy, stately car round
tight corners and up steep, narrow streets.
Midnight in mid-May, and we were chasing
after some of the 384 cars that had entered in
the 2012 Mille Miglia, the classic car race that
covers a thousand miles from Brescia to Rome
and back. I had tagged along as part of Bentley’s
support team and never imagined I’d be lucky
enough to end up at the heart of the action.
Chosen as one of the support cars to celebrate
its 60th anniversary, the R-Type was so
exquisitely elegant that neither police nor
Mille Miglia officials seemed to mind that we
often became muddled up with the actual
racing cars instead of being siphoned off to
join the other support vehicles.
The Bentley team cars we were supporting
were two 4.5l supercharged ‘Blowers’. Great
For three days and nights,
classic cars from all over the
world hurtle through Italy in
a ritual that goes back to 1927
vintage motoring | BrUmmeLL 57
on the road
Previous page: Scrutineering at the Piazza del Loggia in Brescia. This page: A 1930 Le Mans 4.5l supercharged ‘Birkin Blower’. Opposite: Three Bentley Blowers race from the start
vintage motoring | BrUmmeLL 59
These aren’t just pretty boys’
toys but triumphs of engineering
and craftsmanship, built to endure
and endowed with character
growling beasts in traditional racing green that
reeked of oil and leather, exhausts noisily
belching filthy fumes. The 1929 ‘Birkin Blower’
had been raced extensively by legendary
Bentley Boy, Tim Birkin and already completed
the Mille Miglia in 2005 and 2011. Its
companion car started life in 1930 as one of
Bentley’s first showroom demonstrators and
was one of 50 Blowers built for the road.
Every spring, for three days and nights,
classic cars from all over the world hurtle
through Italy in a time-honoured ritual that goes
back to 1927, when 77 Italian cars entered the
first ever Mille Miglia open-road endurance
race. The only time Britain has ever won was in
1955 when Stirling Moss and Denis Jenkinson
averaged an astonishing speed of 97.6 miles
per hour in a Mercedes-Benz 300S SLR. In
1957, the race was stopped after two fatal
crashes. However, 20 years later it was reborn
as the Mille Miglia Storica, a parade of
pre-1957 cars that spanned several days,
and then revived in 1982 as an endurance
road rally event once again.
I had no idea what to expect when I arrived
in Brescia, a small, beautiful town near Verona,
in time for the ‘scrutineering’, an elaborate word
for looking at the cars before the start. With so
many classic cars gathered in a vast hangar
on the edge of town, it was like a pop-up car
museum, with row after row of vintage glories
– a grass-coloured MG with bottle-green
leather tub seats, a tomato-red Mercedes with
gull-wing doors and toffee leather interior, a
jet-black Ford Thunderbird with fins, a
cornflower-blue Bugatti with wind-up engine.
Within minutes, I was wondering why it had
taken me so long to appreciate the splendour
of old cars. Engines remain a mystery, but the
sheer loveliness of the cars’ silhouettes was
enough to transform a reluctant debutante into
an aficionado within minutes. There were Aston
Martins, Porsches, Ferraris, Lancias,
Maseratis, Jaguars, Austin Healeys, Alfa
Romeos and, of course, the Bentley team’s two
magnificent Blowers. I watched a silver-haired
man reverently stroke the smooth flank of
a scarlet Officine Meccaniche Superba and, for
the first time, saw through a committed driving
man’s eyes – these weren’t just pretty boys’ toys
but triumphs of engineering and craftsmanship,
built to endure and endowed with character and
resilience through time and punishing journeys.
That night, Swiss luxury watchmaker
Chopard, one of the race’s sponsors, threw
a lavish dinner and I talked to Andrew Day, a
Bentley owner and driving enthusiast. Bentley
had invited Andrew to be a co-driver of their
1930 model with Rolf Frech, a member of
Bentley’s Board for Engineering. ‘I’ve done the
Mille Miglia nine times in a Bentley and always
finished,’ he said. ‘The only time I didn’t was
when I drove in a 1934 Alfa Romeo.’ Though
clearly passionate about driving Bentleys (he’s
one of the 3,700 members of the Bentley
Drivers’ Club), Andrew admitted that the Mille
Miglia was more of a man’s idea of fun, recalling
the time his girlfriend – now his wife – was his
co-driver: ‘It was 2002 and we were on our way
to visit friends. I told her we were just doing a
little detour through Italy and she found herself
in an open car late at night. It was cold and
raining and we got lost twice. I was not a
gentleman,’ he chuckles ruefully. ‘I’ve since
become less competitive about it all.’
Nowadays the race is less about
competing, and more about the thrill of driving
a beautiful old car very fast through some of
Italy’s most ravishing countryside and historic
towns. This is not a rally I can imagine Britain
welcoming. Somehow, I cannot envisage British
children out on the streets till after midnight,
cheering on a bunch of wealthy car enthusiasts
as they career noisily past, ignoring red lights
and emitting a pungent fog of toxic fumes. If this
were the Home Counties, Health & Safety would
undoubtedly deem it not just dangerous for the
children, but a health threat to the entire region.
The joy of racing through Italy is that Italians
embrace the Mille Miglia as an opportunity to
party and so, as cars charge through towns and
villages, children run alongside waving flags,
drivers laugh as their cars are forced off the
road by a hooting Porsche or Bugatti and the
atmosphere everywhere is festive as people
celebrate this unique pageant.
The route itself is spectacular. Well away
from motorways and A-roads, it winds through
unspoilt countryside and historic towns that
include Florence, Siena, Bologna, Modena,
Parma, Verona and Cremona. Perhaps my
favourite memories will be of sweeping along
the shores of Lake Garda at sunset or climbing
the winding road that snakes up to San Marino
and then down again to Sansepolcro in Tuscany.
Most nights we slept for about four hours in
unmemorable hotels after memorably jolly
late-night parties that carried on as long as the
last cars were rolling into that day’s destination.
What is perhaps most remarkable about
the Mille Miglia is that entrants come from as
far afield as Argentina, India, Japan, Russia
and Zambia and are united by their shared
passion for driving. It’s a rare opportunity to
show off unashamedly, and fulfil a fantasy of
dashing full-throttle around Italy in the company
of fellow devotees. Whether you’re in a 1929
Bentley, a 1977 Mercedes or a 1955 Porsche,
you’re celebrating the fruit of decades of superior
craftsmanship and engineering; it’s the ultimate
eulogy to some of the finest cars ever built.
1000miglia.eu; bentleymotors.com
BRUMMELL | accEssoRiEs60
BacK To BLacKBlack document case in supple ‘pleated’ leather, £1,650, Dior Homme. Black embellished suede boot, £1,295, alaïa at Harrods
Be indulgent this season with accessories made from the softest leather,
the smoothest satin and the richest velvet, for you or your dearest
Photography Andy Barter styling Tamara Fulton
A touch
of class
red alertOpposite, clockwise from top: ‘Dolce’ bag, £1,095, dolce & Gabbana at Harrods. Small ‘Heroine’ bag, £1,395, alexander
McQueen at Harrods. Ostrich leather bag, £3,250, Givenchy at Harrods. ‘Kelly’ goatskin bag, £5,420, Hermès
eleGantly waistedThis page from left: Black belt with punched detail, £200, Brioni. Red leather belt, £306, alexander McQueen. Black croc
grey leather moc-croc belt, £195, both Hardy amies. ‘Etrivière’ belt in burgundy suede, £540, Hermès. Snakeskin black spot belt
belt, £69, aspinal of london. ‘Figure’ belt in perforated black calfskin, £620, Hermès. Grey leather belt, £195, and
accessories | BrUMMell 63
in red, £135, and in grey, £135, both Paul smith at Harrods. Black and white snakeskin belt, £360, alexander McQueen
BRUMMELL | accEssoRiEs64
pURpLE hazEThis page, clockwise from top left: Tassled slippers, £340, canali. Slippers with silver monogram, £335, alfred Dunhill.
‘Grant’ suede tassled loafer, £530, Tom Ford. Slippers with silver motif, £453, Versace at harrods. Slippers with purple piping,
£350, penelope chilvers. Slippers with gold stitching, £295, holland & holland
BaG iT Up Opposite from top: Satin rectangle bag, £1,400, prada. Suede bag, £540, Miu Miu. Satin clutch, £1,160,
Lanvin at harrods. Satin pochette embellished with gold and mother-of-pearl cabochon beads and glass stones, £4,770,
Bulgari. Beaded satin bag, £1,400, prada
STOCKISTS DETAILS ON PAGE 66
FEaTURE TiTLE | BRUMMELL 00
sTyLisT’s assisTanT Maddy O’Flaherty phoToGRaphER’s assisTanT Sergio Conde Thanks To Lucy Ziondi
BRUMMELL | BY GEORGE66
Stockists Alexander McQueen 020 7494 8840; alexandermcqueen.com
Alfred Dunhill dunhill.co.uk A Sauvage 020 7495 5468; asauvage.com
Aspinal of London aspinaloflondon.com Brioni brioni.com Bulgari 020 7838 9411; bulgari.com Canali 020 7290 3500; canali.com
Chanel 020 7493 5040; chanel.com Dior 020 7172 0172; dior.com
Dolce & Gabbana dolcegabbana.it Givenchy 020 7518 0680;
givenchy.com Harrods 020 7730 1234; harrods.com Hardy Amies
020 7734 2436; hardyamies.com Hermès 020 7499 8856;
hermès.com Holland & Holland 020 7499 4411 ; hollandandholland.com
Lanvin lanvin.com Matches 020 7487 5400; matchesfashion.com
Miu Miu 020 7409 0900; miumiu.com Moussaieff 020 7290 1536;
moussaieff.co.uk Paul Smith paulsmith.co.uk Penelope Chilvers 020 8969
2506; penelopechilvers.com Pomellato 020 7355 0300; pomellato.com
Prada 020 7647 5000; prada.com Rake rakestyle.com Spencer Hart 020 7494 0000; spencerhart.com; Theo Fennell 020 7591 5000;
theofennell.com Tom Ford tomford.com Versace versace.com
The international jeweller Harry Winston was
impressing Hollywood even before Marilyn Monroe
breathlessly name-checked him in ‘Diamonds Are
A Girl’s Best Friend’ in the 1953 film Gentlemen
Prefer Blondes. He was a man of vision, says
the Harry Winston president and CEO Frédéric
de Narp: ‘He was fearless, a pioneer – and
passionate about precious stones. When he
opened his doors in New York in 1932, the
brand that emerged was all about exclusivity,
rarity, craftsmanship and innovation.’
Winston revolutionised the setting of stones.
‘At that time,’ continues de Narp, ‘all the other
houses were designing Art Deco, using heavy
metal and beautiful geometric designs. Harry
Winston went in the opposite direction and said,
“If I could, I would attach diamonds on a woman’s
When pioneering jeweller Harry
Winston began designing for the
stars, glamour changed forever
Talk tome, Harry
skin”.’ For him, the stone was the most important
element of a piece of jewellery, so he would set
the diamond with a minimum of metal so the focus
would be on the stone, allowing it to capture and
reflect the light and show off its beauty.
He had the largest collection of precious
gemstones – including the Hope Diamond, which
the company has donated to the Smithsonian
in Washington, DC – second only to the British
Royal Family. Eighty years on, the house is still
honouring the legacy of its founder. ‘Harry
Winston’s jewellery has always been about
meaningful moments: today 80 per cent of clients
come to us to celebrate an important time in their
life. We offer timeless design and the highest
quality of stones, craftsmanship and creativity.’
Harry Winston was the first jeweller to loan
to an actress for the Academy Awards, and in
so doing, he revolutionised red-carpet glamour.
In 1944, he dressed Jennifer Jones in signature
diamonds; she went on to win Best Actress and
Harry was lauded as ‘jeweller to the stars’ – an
accolade that has stuck, as generations of
Hollywood luminaries have looked to Harry
Winston to complete their award-ceremony look.
So it’s only fitting that the modern-day Harry
Winston company became lead sponsor of the
major new Hollywood Costume exhibition at the
Victoria & Albert Museum, exploring the art of
costume design in cinematic history and bringing
it to life with cutting-edge digital production.
For a man who would never have his face
photographed – ‘for insurance purposes, as he
was well known for carrying diamonds in his
pockets,’ de Narp explains – Winston’s legacy
has brought radiance and scintillation to the most
glamorous of occasions, adding sparkle to life.
The Hollywood Costume exhibition is at the V&A
until 27 Jan 2013; vam.ac.uk; harrywinston.com
Words Joanne Glasbey
SET IN STONEFrom left: Marilyn Monroe in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes; replica of Kate Hudson’s Harry Winston necklace from How To Lose A Guy In 10 Days, recreated for the V&A exhibition
For any enquiries, please call +44 (0) 1428 656822
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BESPOKE PrOmOtiOn | BrUmmELL 07
Corporate art collections are not new. Since banker and philanthropist David Rockefeller first established his art programme in 1959, many others have followed suit. However, Rockefeller’s vision extended beyond the acquisition of objects, setting exacting standards for their care.
At Bank of America Merrill Lynch, a similar sense of responsibility towards artworks and their audience has informed not only the creation of the firm’s collection but also its policies regarding their use. In the
belief that greater cultural understanding fosters increased opportunity for all, the bank has built a unique Arts and Culture Programme supporting organisations worldwide and focused on three key commitments: to share, to enable and to preserve.
Since 2008, an innovative loan scheme has allowed non-profit galleries to stage more than 50 revenue-generating exhibitions of material from the collection, at no cost to the institutions themselves. The bank also supports the performing arts, enabling
outreach, education and access initiatives in orchestras and opera houses, as well as museums, communities and businesses.
Another major contribution to fine art has been the bank’s Art Conservation Project. Initiated in 2010, it enables costly but vital technical work to be undertaken in museums and galleries across the world: work that is central to their mission as custodians of visual culture.
For the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Marc Chagall is more than just one of the great 20th-century painters. Active at the Museum’s
With its support of museums, grants for painting restoration
and fellowship in conservation research, says Dr Jim Harris,
BAML is helping to keep art in fine health for the future
in association with
culture,preserveD
3
in association with
2
1
foundation in 1932 and in the building of its collections, he donated its first-ever picture, the 1925 gouache, Jew with Torah. Two further gifts followed, The Wailing Wall in 1948 and Solitude in 1953. Together with paintings purchased by the Museum, they constitute a key group of works in which Chagall explored ideas of Jewish identity in the face of the looming European crisis of the inter-war years.
Chagall was hailed by Picasso who, after the death of Matisse, described the Russian as ‘the only painter left who understands what colour really is.’ His paintings proved as vulnerable as any to the ravages of time and climate. But the partnership between Bank of America and the Tel Aviv Museum has ensured that their predations have been arrested and
their effects reversed in five of the artist's most important works. Scientific investigations of the pigments and supports of the paintings led to the removal of discoloured varnish and the stabilisation, retouching and, in some cases, relining of the paintings to recapture the fresh brilliance of Chagall’s intense palette. Even their frames have been repaired and regilded.
The Courtauld Institute of Art, though a very different institution from the Tel Aviv Museum, is its exact contemporary. Founded in 1932, it houses one of the world’s finest small art museums, the Courtauld Gallery, and is a global centre for training art historians and conservators.
Paintings conservators Clare Richardson and Kate Stonor, partners in the firm TSR
Imaging, both originally trained at the Courtauld and returned in 2011 to take up the Caroline Villers Research Fellowship in Conservation. Their project included a technical study of Peter Paul Rubens’ Cain Slaying Abel, using microscopy and the latest infrared imaging techniques.
Obstructing their investigation, however, were layers of yellowing varnish , the removal of which lay beyond the scope of the Fellowship. The wooden panel on which Rubens had painted his picture was in an even worse state. According Clare Richardson, ‘Although the front was in relatively good condition, the back had suffered from warping, cracking and woodworm, largely as a result of well-meaning but destructive interventions by previous
Previous page Marc Chagall’s Solitude (1933), in the collection of the Tel Aviv Museum, supported by Bank of America Merrill Lynch. This page, 1 & 2 Two-sided canvas by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner – Scene In A Forest (Moritzburg Ponds) and Nude in the Studio – restored with support from BAML. 3 Lovers by Chagall. 4 Cain Slaying Abel by Rubens, restored by the Courtauld, with an award from the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Art Conservation Project
A BRUMMELL PROMOTION 00
4
bRUMMELLbESPOKE PROMOTION | bRUMMELL 09
restorers. The whole painting was badly in need of conservation and restoration’.
The Courtauld applied for funding to the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Art Conservation Project and was awarded a major grant. Richardson takes up the story. ‘The restoration of the painting wouldn’t have happened without the Bank of America Merrill Lynch award. It enabled us to repair and consolidate the back of the panel and to remove old varnish, which made the technical study far more fruitful.’
After working together on the reverse, and on the cleaning of the front, the two conservators studied detailed infra-red images of the surface, called reflectograms, before Kate Stonor and Graeme Barraclough, Chief
Conservator at the Gallery, completed the restoration. The images unlocked a wealth of information about Rubens’ practice as a painter.
What the reflectograms revealed were underdrawings in the trees and landscape made by a hand clearly not Rubens’ own. ‘Cain Slaying Abel was painted around 1610, at a moment in Rubens’ career when he had recently returned to Antwerp from Italy and set up as an independent master,’ explains Richardson. ‘The underdrawing tells us that, even at an early stage in his career, he employed a specialist landscape painter to assist him in the workshop. It’s an important art-historical discovery to set alongside our improved technical understanding of how Rubens himself painted.’
The Rubens and the Chagall group are now back on permanent display in their respective homes. More importantly, they are physically secure and robust enough to give pleasure for generations to come. They are not alone. To date, 22 institutions worldwide have been partnered by the bank in conservation projects.
Coupled with the scholarly enquiry made possible as a result of their restoration, the rescue of these artworks places Bank of America Merrill Lynch at the forefront of support for the arts at its most fundamental level – in the care of objects.
The last word on the Art Conservation Project should go to conservators Clare Richardson and Kate Stonor in light of their painstaking restoration of the unseen reverse of the Courtauld Rubens. ‘This is not glamorous work - but it’s incredibly important to the long- term future of the painting.’ It’s a far cry from simply adding bling to a corporate HQ. Dr Jim Harris is Andrew W Mellon Foundation Teaching Curator at the Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology, Oxford University, and a former Caroline Villers Research Fellow in Conservation at the Courtauld Institute of Art
The restoration wouldn’t have
happened without the award.
It made the technical study
of the painting far more fruitful