
Cady Noland: Obscene
Jordan Carter, curator and cohead of the curatorial department at Dia Art Foundation, New York, engages with the new artist’s book Cady Noland: Polaroids 1986–2024.
Fall 2025 Issue
The jewelry designer Jean Schlumberger permanently changed the face of High Jewelry with his daring approach to materials and techniques. His engagement with flora and fauna from the sea to the sky, and his choice of unparalleled gems, found an eager audience during his lifetime and continues to glamour the eyes and minds of jewelry lovers today. The Quarterly’s Wyatt Allgeier explores his life, legacy, and the persistence of his studied yet whimsical work.

Jean Schlumberger, 1971. Photo: Horst P. Horst/Condé Nast via Getty Images
Jean Schlumberger, 1971. Photo: Horst P. Horst/Condé Nast via Getty Images
In the rarefied world of High Jewelry, few names command the reverence reserved for Jean Schlumberger. His work remains a touchstone of imagination and technical aplomb, as jewelry that seems not merely made but conjured into being. As if springing from myth or dream, and deeply influenced by his travels to such places as Bali, the island of Guadeloupe, and India, Schlumberger’s designs dance between whimsy and elegance, capturing the natural world with a hand both exacting and enchanted.
Schlumberger’s journey to becoming one of the most celebrated jewelry designers of the twentieth century was anything but conventional. Born in 1907 in Alsace (today French, but then part of Germany) into a textile-manufacturing dynasty, Schlumberger was discouraged by his family from pursuing art. (Like so many parents over the generations, they wanted him to work in finance.) Alas for them, and thankfully for everyone else, creation was his calling. Moving to Paris in his early twenties, Schlumberger wandered the city’s flea markets for materials and inspirations—some of his earliest creations were clips repurposed from porcelain flowers he found there—and immersed himself in the robust literary and artistic circles on offer. Over the next decade he opened an atelier and caught the eye of Elsa Schiaparelli, the grande dame of Surrealist fashion. It was with her house that he further established himself as a talent unbound by the traditional vocabulary of adornment, creating buttons and unique costume jewelry in the forms of cherubs, fruit, insects, and beyond.
World War II put Schlumberger’s creative life on hold, as he served first in the French army and then in exile alongside General Charles de Gaulle. After the war, though, he moved to New York, where his work quickly gained attention in the international jet set forming and re-forming in the city. (It didn’t hurt that Diana Vreeland, editor-in-chief of Vogue, had been admiring his work since his days with Schiaparelli.) His originality and meticulous craftsmanship attracted a sophisticated clientele eager for something different from the mainstream, something whimsical and amusing after so many years of chaos and privation around the globe. After the horror of the war, can we blame anyone for having a proclivity for shimmering seahorses and bejeweled parrots?

The Tiffany Diamond set in Jean Schlumberger’s Bird on a Rock brooch for the Schlumberger retrospective at the Musée des Arts décoratifs, Paris, 1995. Photo: The Tiffany Archives
In 1956, Schlumberger’s career reached a defining moment when he was invited by Walter Hoving, then chairman of Tiffany & Co., to join the American jeweler. Schlumberger accepted, becoming the first designer in Tiffany’s history—and one of only four—to sign their work, a rare honor that underscored his influence and artistry. (He was in good company; the others were Frank Gehry, Elsa Peretti, and Paloma Picasso.) Schlumberger found the perfect stage for his imagination on the mezzanine of Tiffany’s Fifth Avenue flagship. Over the next two decades, working with expert craftspeople and drawing inspiration from flora, fauna, history, and mythology, he produced some of the most iconic jewelry of the twentieth century. His designs defied convention, embracing asymmetry, movement, and vivid color. As he said, “I observe nature and find verve.”

Jean Schlumberger by Tiffany Jellyfish Brooch
Schlumberger’s work was not just decorative but narrative. Whether sculpting sea urchins from sapphires or mid-flight birds from diamonds and gold, he brought to each piece a draftsman’s eye and a poet’s instinct. His insistence on drawing each design by hand is readily apparent in the works’ unmistakably nonmechanical lines. And his client list reflects his singular approach, his pieces finding their way onto the bodies of a veritable who’s who of twentieth-century glamour. Jacqueline Kennedy was famously fond of his enamel-and-gold bracelets; her husband, the US president, gave her a Schlumberger berry clip in yellow gold, diamonds, and rubies to celebrate the birth of their son John Kennedy Jr. in 1960. Elizabeth Taylor (who received a dolphin clip from Richard Burton to celebrate the 1964 premiere of The Night of the Iguana), Audrey Hepburn, and Greta Garbo were among Schlumberger’s admirers. His pieces were coveted not only for their beauty but for the distinctive personality they expressed. Beyond being straightforward clients, many of these women, including Rachel “Bunny” Mellon, became close friends and confidants, exchanging letters with the designer for decades. While all this sounds quintessentially luxurious, Schlumberger was not obsessed with status or ostentation, preferring quiet travel and solitary engagement with the natural world. He was known to avoid interviews. He loved the sea.
Schlumberger retired from Tiffany in the 1970s but continued to influence the world of design until his death, in 1987. His work remains among the most beloved in the world of jewelry collecting. His designs are housed in permanent museum collections, including the Musée des Arts décoratifs in Paris, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond (the last thanks to Bunny Mellon’s donation of her substantial personal collection).

Bird on a Rock by Tiffany earrings in platinum and 18k yellow gold with tanzanites, diamonds, and rubies. Photo: Fujio Emura
Among Schlumberger’s many triumphs, perhaps none is more emblematic than his Bird on a Rock—a glittering avian figure perched irreverently atop a massive gemstone. First conceived in 1965 for Bunny Mellon, in yellow and white diamonds atop a lapis lazuli cabochon, the concept ran into various iterations over the years (the setting of the house’s legendary 128.54-carat Tiffany Diamond into the motif for the 1995 Schlumberger retrospective at the Musée des Arts décoratifs being the apotheosis). The piece embodies everything Schlumberger stood for: technical precision, natural inspiration, and playful grandeur.
This year, Tiffany & Co. introduces a new chapter in the bird’s mythos with the debut of Bird on a Rock by Tiffany, a new Fine and High Jewelry collection that reinterprets the iconic design through a thoroughly modern lens. Under the artistic direction of Nathalie Verdeille, the bird doesn’t just land, it soars. “For the High Jewelry Bird on a Rock designs, we studied birds as Jean Schlumberger did—carefully observing their stances, their feathers, the structures of their wings—to create dynamic forms that seem to flutter and perch upon the wearer,” says Verdeille. Her approach is both academic and poetic, a continuation of Schlumberger’s own method of rigorous observation transformed into imaginative abstraction.

Bird on a Rock by Tiffany Wings Graduated Necklace in platinum with diamonds. Photo: Fujio Emura
At the core of the collection lies the wing motif, a sculptural symbol of freedom, love, and metamorphosis. This motif becomes a connective thread across both High and Fine Jewelry suites, taking bold yet graceful form in diamonds and precious metals. Verdeille distills the bird’s essence not into literal feathers but into textural patterns that evoke movement, lightness, and fluidity. “For the Fine Jewelry collection, we looked at this bird from another perspective, distilling it down to its essence—the wing—and stylizing the motif into elegant, abstract patterns,” she continues. “These sculptural forms intertwine and unfold in textural creations that are as abstract as they are symbolic.”
Nature, in Schlumberger’s hands, was something not to imitate but to converse with—to stylize and exaggerate, to transform through imagination. The new collection understands this implicitly. It doesn’t merely replicate the past, it listens to it, responds to it, and lets it evolve. In reinterpreting Schlumberger’s bird, Tiffany has done more than revisit a classic: With Verdeille’s vision, they have added a new chapter to an already extraordinary story—one that affirms the power of reinvention grounded in tradition. The bird, once a gleaming sentinel atop an immovable gem, now spreads its wings, reminding us that even icons can take flight again.
All photos: courtesy Tiffany & Co.

Wyatt Allgeier is a writer and an editor for Gagosian Quarterly. He lives and works in New York City.

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