Thursday, November 29, 2012

SCARAB FEVER


Sphinx head incorporating a piece of ancient glass, design modeled in wax and cast in gold by Gustav Manz for F. Walter Lawrence (image Town & Country, December 12, 1903)

In late spring 1904, Jewelers' Circular reviewed an exhibit organized by the Handicraft League of Cincinnati and held at the city's Woman's Club, leading with a case with almost 50 pieces belonging to "Gustav Manz, New York" that included "fine examples of the old Egyptian outline":
  • "The rings in the collection were immense and the settings of gems in etruscan gold, as well as the large brooches of lapis lazuli, Cyprian glass sphynx (sic) head, in the styles of over 2,000 years ago, made a decidedly beautiful and instructive collection..." (1)




Gustav Manz necklace pendant with scarab and pyramid-shaped drop featured at the eighth Industrial Arts Exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (image from The Jewelers' Circular, January 30, 1924) 

Earlier that spring Manz's historical and nouveau inspired gold-work, including a sphinx head scarf pin fashioned around a piece of ancient glass, filled the case of jeweler F. Walter Lawrence's display at the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis. Manz's work appeared in articles Lawrence wrote for The Craftsman (2) and Town & Country (3). While neither publication credited Manz as the maker, forms submitted to the jury selecting jewelry for the St. Louis exposition reveal that virtually all of the hand-wrought work in Lawrence's traveling collection were modeled and cast by the German-born Manz, and likely had a hand in designing as well (though an emphasis on "American" design and artistry probably worked against giving credit where it was due). Lawrence's salon, along with most of the prominent jewelry retailers in Manhattan, Boston, Philadelphia and elsewhere, would carry Manz's wares over the next four decades. 


Manz's workshop produced this ring carved with stylized Egyptian lotus and set with green tourmaline for Tiffany & Co, 1922 (Manz archive, Winterthur Museum); below: Manz gouache design for a gem-set pendant with carved urei and Egyptian figure wearing headdress (Mathews Family Collection)

                         

By 1912, after partnering with fellow manufacturing jeweler Walter P. McTeigue for a few years, Manz was established in his own studio-factory on East 28th Street, at the edge of the Flatiron District. In March of that year, he registered copyright on one of his Egyptian designs: a sculpted panel, or plaque, depicting "Two columns, carved with figure of Isis and Osiris, supporting plate above panel of pyramids, sphinx and two lions nearby, in bas-relief." 

As the jewelry industry recovered from World War I, and the 1920s roared in, orders for Manz's patriotic themed subsided and demand for his Egyptian, animal, and "oriental" novelties increased. Around this time Manz's younger daughter became her father's traveling sales representative and in-house advisor on rapidly evolving post-war fashions for women. His long record of supplying fine carved mountings for Tiffany & Company paid off when he was invited to participate in one of the Metropolitan Museum's series of industrial art exhibits organized by the museum's forward-thinking decorative arts curator Richard Bach. 


        Gustav Manz gouache rendering of an Egyptian temple 
            mounting for a scarab (Mathews Family Collection)

The Jewelers' Circular's fashion correspondent Isabelle Archer effused over "splendid examples of commercial jewelry [from] the houses of Mehrlust, Manz, and Cartier..."(4) on view at the eighth annual show. One of the most admired pieces in Manz's case was a pendant depicting a king of the Nile flanked by seated attendants; it appeared on the cover of Jewelers' Circular's issue containing the first of Archer's reviews of the 1924 show. The piece incorporated a pastiche of symbols derived from Manz's earlier studies of archaeological holdings at the Cairo Museum as well as objects from excavations of Tutankhamun's tomb.


Detail from brochure for Metropolitan Museum of Art Eighth Exhibition of Industrial Art, 1924; inset: the Met decorative art galleries, circa 1920s (brochure and gallery image accessed via Thomas Watson Library, MMA)

At the conclusion of her review, Archer pivoted from the angular sapphire, diamond and onyx jewels in the Cartier group to Manz's latest reboot of traditional motifs that were, in her words, "very distinctly the Oriental type." The array of jade, pearls, pink beryls, and other gemstones set in lattice made for "a most remarkable color scheme."(5) Cartier's geometric mounts and Manz's chinoiserie broke away from art nouveau fantasy and Edwardian garlands and toward the sleeker, stylized forms and brilliant colors embraced by the flapper generation and designers of the art deco era. 

Manz's work rarely qualified as trendy, however. To the end of his career he maintained a craftsman's allegiance to hand-wrought, custom work, generally eschewing deco's glossy, machine-age contours. Through all the change he witnessed in over his five decades in America—political, social, industrial—his favorite periods and motifs hardly changed. As Fitzgerald writes at the end of The Great Gatsby, his 1925 flapper novel: "So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past."


From Near to Far East: This gold, jade, and enamel Buddha pendant passed down to a descendant by Manz's daughter may have featured in his display case at the Metropolitan Museum Industrial Art show in 1924 (Mathews family collection)


Notes
(1) "Beautiful Art Work at the Recent Exhibition of the Handicraft League of Cincinnati." The Jewelers' Circular-Weekly, Vol. 53, No. 20 (1904): 14  
(2) Lawrence, F. Walter. "Craftsmanship versus Intrinsic Value." The Craftsman 4:3 (1903): 181-185 (illustrated)
(3) Lawrence, F. Walter. "Symbolism and Jewelry." Town & Country (December 12, 1903): 34-35
(4) Archer, Isabelle M., "When Art Meets Industry: Modern Decorative Design As Shown at The Metropolitan Museum." Archer, Isabelle M. The Jewelers' Circular, Vol. 88 (February 6, 1924): 275. Jacob Mehrlust was the third manufacturer, along with Cartier and Gustav Manz, who received special mention in Archer's review.
(5) Archer, Isabelle M., "The Present Trend in Decorative Designing, Traced Through the Industrial Exhibition Now at the Metropolitan Museum," Jewelers' Circular Vol. 88 (January 30, 1924): 53-55

We would like to thank Courtney Bowers Marhev, author of the first scholarly 
study of Gustav Manz's work, Where Credit Is Due (Smithsonian, 2008); Janet Zapata for identifying Manz's relationship with F. Walter Lawrence in an article for Magazine Antiques (April 2004); the Thomas J. Watson Library at The Metropolitan Museum for digital access to The Jewelers' Circular, Industrial Art exhibition catalogs, and help locating correspondence between 
Doris Manz Eastman and Francis Henry Taylor; and to Winterthur Museum, Garden, 
and Library as the repository for the Gustav Manz Papers.


Post updated October 21, 2019

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 Except where otherwise credited all images 
 © Gustav Manz LLC



Monday, November 5, 2012

"YOU CAN'T CRY ON A DIAMOND'S SHOULDER" — Elizabeth Taylor


Talk about gem lust. Here's actor Richard Burton licking his chops after a conquest (from his diaries, published this week by Yale University Press):

[November 1969]
Saturday 1st, Gstaad I bought the ring for Elizabeth. I had set a 'lid' on it of one million dollars if thou pleasest and Cartier outbid me by $50,000...bugger Cartiers, I was going to get that diamond if it cost me my life or 2 million dollars whichever was the greater. [The next day Burton negotiated with Cartier to buy the stone.For 24 hours the agony persisted and in the end I won. I got the bloody thing. For $1,100,000...It turns out that one of my rivals was Ari Onassis but he chickened at $700,000. But apart from the fact that I am a natural winner, I wanted that diamond because it is incomparably lovely. And it should be on the loveliest woman in the world. I would have had a fit if it went to Jackie Kennedy or Sophia Loren or Mrs. Huntingdon Misfit of Dallas, Texas....

Postscript: After the couple divorced in 1978, Taylor auctioned the 69.42 carat stone (known as the Taylor-Burton Diamond); Taylor reportedly earmarked the $5 million proceeds from the sale to help build a hospital in Botswana.


Shoulder to shoulder: Richard and Elizabeth
 17 November 1969
(Courtesy Yale University Press)

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Copyright © Laura Mathews, 2014 

All Rights Reserved 
 GUSTAV MANZ LLC
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Sunday, November 4, 2012

CARRYING THE FLAG FOR TUSK


Explorers Club flag designed by founding member
Frederick S. Dellenbaugh 

Superstorm Sandy forced Tusk USA to shift venue for its inaugural Friends of Tusk fundraising gala from flooded Tribeca to higher ground. On very short notice, the Explorers Club opened its doors for a reception at which guests heard Bryan Christy, author of the recent National Geographic cover story "Blood Ivory," spoke about his investigation of global markets for decorative and religious carved ivory that help drive illegal trafficking. John Heminway presented a clip from his documentary "Battle for the Elephants." 

An art sale at the event, which raised in excess of $200,000 to support Tusk's programs, featured Nick Brandt's photograph "Ranger with Tusks of Killed Elephant"; a sculpture of a lion by British artist Tatyana Murray; and a Gustav Manz sterling cuff—donated in support of Tusk's 3650 Campaign. 



Elephant mother and calves 
Photo (c) by Nick Brandt


Copyright © Laura Mathews
All Rights Reserved 
 GUSTAV MANZ LLC