
Luxury chronograph watches for men with multiple subdials and detailed craftsmanship -Renaissance Revival Watch and Chatelaine by Boucheron
Qty:
The watch and a small seal hang from a silver and 18K gold mounted leather strap known as a chatelaine. The word comes from the French for “lady of the castle,” and they were originally chains attached to the waistband or belt from which one would carry each household key in the 16th and 17th centuries. In the 19th century, they became fashionable among women of the upper classes as a means to carry items needed during their daily routines such as watches, sewing tools or vinaigrettes.
Alfred Menu was an esteemed jeweler and skilled craftsman who began his career as an apprentice to Louis Benoist in 1840 before catching the attention of Boucheron who brought him on as a freelance jeweler to supply works for the firm’s retail spaces. By the time this watch was created circa 1883, Boucheron occupied four arcades in the fashionable Palais-Royal shopping district, and they had won the Gold Medal during the Exposition Universelle. Menu's superbly executed gold pieces with their Renaissance-inspired designs and architectural motifs were a natural fit for this luxury jewelry maison.
Circa 1883
Signed “Boucheron Paris, no. P 312 and 175”
7“ length
Watch: 31mm diameter
Literature:
Néret, Gilles, Boucheron: Four Generations of a World-Renowned Jeweler, Rizzoli, 1988, p. 39, ill. 67.
Neret, Gilles. Boucheron: The Jeweller of Time. Lausanne, Office du Livre, 1993, p. 21, ill. 17.