Cartier’s most enduring motif isn’t a flower, a bird, or a butterfly. It’s a predator: a wildcat—fierce, mysterious, ...
A new installation running during Art Basel examines the luxury jewelry label’s most iconic emblem: the panther.
“Emeralds, onyx, diamonds, a brooch!” is what Jeanne Toussaint is said to have screamed after spotting a panther in the wild while on safari with Louis Cartier. By then she was already director of ...
The journey concludes in a lush botanical installation by Berlin-based artist Clare Celeste, where Cartier’s fauna emerges in ...
A new exhibition explores how Jeanne Toussaint transformed the wild cat into the house's enduring mascot.
The fierce, untamable feline possesses many facets to its personality, and continues to be reimagined in countless creations.
The panther first leapt into Cartier history in 1914 — courtesy of a watch adorned with onyx and diamond “spots,” designed by Louis Cartier himself. More than a century later, it remains a symbol of ...
The creation of a Panthère—whether captured in-motion in a wristwatch, crouched in a ready position on a brooch, or reimagined across a wide array of variations—is not merely the depiction of an ...
This Friday through Sunday, in conjunction with Miami Art Week, Cartier will host an immersive experience to highlight the ...
Cartier’s director of jewelry, Jeanne Toussaint, was nicknamed “La Panthère”—an affectionate tribute to her bold, independent spirit and well-known fetish for felines. An influential figure in the ...
Dating back to 1969, the romantic Love bracelet was designed by Aldo Cipullo to signify an eternal connection – with a screwdriver required to take the band on and off The Italian-American designer ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results