- 24K gold overlay
- Multicolored Swarovski™ crystals
- Optical quality glass
- Chain: 36 inches
- Overall length: 3 inches
- Lobster claw clasp
HISTORY
Louis Comfort Tiffany (American, 1848–1933) was knowledgeable about jewelry trends through art periodicals, international expositions, and, of course, his father's firm, Tiffany & Company—to which he was appointed art director upon his father's death in 1902. The son's earliest jewelry designs were exhibited at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in Saint Louis, where they garnered attention and favorable press by the art critics of the period. Beginning in 1907, jewelry designed by Tiffany and fabricated under his direction was made at the workshops of Tiffany & Company. Between 1914 and 1933, Meta K. Overbeck (American, active ca. 1914–1933), one of Tiffany’s principal designers, supervised his jewelry line and its fabrication. Under Overbeck, the new jewelry displayed a pronounced shift in style and workmanship. Explicit replications of forms from nature were replaced by designs that relied on a high degree of finish, on stylized filigree, and on the stones themselves—their colors, shapes, and textures—to make an elegant bold statement. Fortunately, a book of Overbeck’s jewelry designs survives in the collection of The Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art in Winter Park, Florida.