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LINE VAUTRIN MIROIR SORCIÈRE, CA. 1950s Talos

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:3,000.00 - 5,000.00 USD
LINE VAUTRIN MIROIR SORCIÈRE, CA. 1950s Talos
LINE VAUTRIN MIROIR SORCIÈRE, CA. 1950s Talosel and mirror signed "LINE VAUTRIN" 143/4 in. (37.5 cm) diameter 13/4 in. (4.5 cm) deep Estimate: $3,000-5,000 Provenance Liz O'Brien, New York Line Vautrin (1913-1997), jeweller, alchemist, and designer, first exhibited at the 1937 Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques in Paris. She soon opened a small boutique where she sold buttons and a wide array of accessories in addition to her jewellery. A growing clientele led her to move to the more fashionable rue du Faubourg Saint Honoré. After her marriage in 1942, Vautrin moved her workshop and showroom to a grand hôtel that had once belonged to Louis XVI's paymaster-general on the rue Vieille du Temple. The sources for Vautrin's designs were varied-she looked to antiquity, mythology, medievalism, and the occult. She even produced a series of compacts decorated with rebuses. In the late 1950s and early '60s, she abandoned metalwork and focused on experimenting with her favorite material, resin. She proceeded to develop and patent a technique of working with resin, which she often encrusted with mirrors, and dubbed it Talosel. According to Vautrin's daughter, it took four artisans to create the Talosel mirrors: one to create the mirror, another to tint it, a third to silver the back of it, and a fourth to embed the smaller mirrors into the resin (Ginger Moro, "Line Vautrin, Behind the Sorcerer's Looking Glass, Echoes (August 2000): 92). Her designs in Talosel are imbued with an alchemic magic inherent in this unique medium.