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Line Vautrin Poudrier

Line Vautrin Box
By Line Vautrin
Located in New York, NY
Portman Gallery is pleased to offer a Line Vautrin compact/poudrier in bronze. At first I thought
Category

Vintage 1940s French Modernist Boxes and Cases

Materials

Bronze

Line Vautrin Box
Line Vautrin Box
W 3.15 in D 0.48 in L 2.56 in

Recent Sales

Poudrier, Line Vautrin, circa 1950
By Line Vautrin
Located in Paris, FR
Poudrier by Line Vautrin with snail decor Gilded bronze Signed France, circa 1945-1950
Category

20th Century French Convex Mirrors

Materials

Bronze

Line Vautrin Gilt-Bronze Poudrier
By Line Vautrin
Located in St.Petersburg, FL
A charming powder box in gilt-bronze by Line Vautrin, signed.
Category

Vintage 1950s French Collectible Jewelry

Bronze Poudrier Box by Line Vautrin
By Line Vautrin
Located in Atlanta, GA
Parisian art jeweler Line Vautrin (1913-1997), circa 1945-1946. This lovely piece exemplifies the work of
Category

Vintage 1940s French Mid-Century Modern Decorative Boxes

Materials

Enamel, Bronze

Line Vautrin, "Souriez, Souriez, Toujours", Poudrier, France, circa 1950
By Line Vautrin
Located in New York, NY
"Smile, smile always"; A rare bronze argenté and enamel compact mirror Rebus: Souris-haie-Tou-jours.
Category

Vintage 1940s French Collectible Jewelry

"Un souhait a traversé Paris" Poudrier by Line Vautrin
By Line Vautrin
Located in New York, NY
"A wish traveled across Paris" A bronze argenté and enamel compact mirror Rebus: Un sou-A-i-A traversé par i
Category

Vintage 1940s French Collectible Jewelry

"Loin des yeux, loin du coeur" Poudrier by Line Vautrin
By Line Vautrin
Located in New York, NY
"Out of sight, out of mind" A bronze argenté compact mirror Rebus: Loup-un-dés-yeux-loup-un-du-coeur
Category

Vintage 1940s French Collectible Jewelry

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Line Vautrin Gilt Bronze Moon Star Cosmology 2-part Brooch
By Line Vautrin
Located in New York, NY
Portman is pleased to offer this rare Line Vautrin “performing” brooch, extra-large for her oeuvre. In fact after looking at these for years, I have not seen such a large narrative ...
Category

Mid-20th Century French Modern Brooches

Materials

Bronze, Gilt Metal

Claude Lalanne silver gilt “Collerette” bracelet
By Claude Lalanne
Located in New York, NY
Portman Gallery (Brooklyn, NY) is proud to offer this bracelet by Claude Lalanne in gilt silver, a somewhat rare material in her jewelry oeuvre, number 11 from the edition of only 50...
Category

Late 20th Century French Post-War Cuff Bracelets

Materials

Silver

Claude Lalanne silver gilt “Collerette” bracelet
Claude Lalanne silver gilt “Collerette” bracelet
W 3.51 in D 0.2 in Dm 2.13 in L 4.49 in
Line Vautrin "Dante" Cuff
By Line Vautrin
Located in Riverdale, NY
Rare and iconic Line Vautrin bronze "Dante" Cuff from the 1950's with text from Dante's Divine Comedy engraved into the entire surround. The ingenious mechanism for opening is a pin ...
Category

Vintage 1950s French Artisan Cuff Bracelets

Materials

Bronze

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Line Vautrin for sale on 1stDibs

Celebrated as the “poetess of metal” by Vogue magazine, designer Line Vautrin’s provocative works, which span furniture and jewelry, are characterized by fanciful forms and technical excellence. An audacious decorative artist and intellectual during a time when women were expected to fall into traditional roles, her inspirational designs show her passion for literature, wordplay and mythological allegory.

Born in 1914, Vautrin possessed a sense of curiosity and keen observational skills that led her to start creating at an early age. A talented autodidact, she taught herself to work with metal while spending time in her family’s bronze foundry. Vautrin had already mastered the skills of casting, carving, gilding and polishing bronze by the time she was in her early teens, and introduced her first line of jewelry when she was only twenty years old, offering her unique brooches, belt clasps and buttons to a select group of customers. In 1937, Vautrin helmed a small booth at the Paris International Exposition, where she gained some notoriety for her handcrafted accessories. Around the same time, Vautrin worked briefly for Elsa Schiaparelli, a like-minded fashion designer whose achievements propelled her onto the cover of Time magazine in 1934.

Vautrin opened a modest boutique near the Champs-Élysées in the late 1930s. During World War II, she created playful and sophisticated necklaces, powder boxes, earrings and other items that gave her clientele a welcome respite from wartime hardships. There was great demand for Vautrin’s work, and she opened a larger shop on rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré in 1946. Shortly thereafter, she opened her own atelier in Paris’s then run-down Marais district with her husband, interior decorator Jacques Armand Bonnaud. The neighborhood would later become world-famous for its boutiques and designer shops.

Vautrin’s boundless curiosity led her to constantly experiment with new materials and processes. In 1955, she perfected her technique with a new form of cellulose acetate resin, which she patented under the name Talosel. Vautrin used this material extensively to create complicated mirrored inlays, which became one of her signature motifs.

Throughout her life, Vautrin played with literary and religious iconography in her designs, drawing inspiration from common aphorisms, ancient world mythologies and alchemical principles. Her passion for symbology and the written word is reflected in her work, which often features intricate lettering and carefully rendered shapes and figures. Vautrin's pieces were imbued with her own sense of humor and love of fantasy.

In 1969, Vautrin closed her shop, and, alongside her daughter, Marie-Laure Bonnaud-Vautrin, opened a craft school to teach her innovative techniques to aspiring artists. Vautrin retired in 1980 but continued to create art from her apartment up until her death in 1997. Her individualism earned her a place among the most iconic creators of mid-century jewelry and decorative objects. Actress Brigitte Bardot and fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent became notable collectors of her work.

In 1992, Vautrin was recognized for her work in developing new decorative techniques by the Société d'Encouragement aux Métiers d’Art (later the Institut National des Métiers d’Art). Her designs were also celebrated by the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, which held a retrospective of her works in 1999.

Find vintage Line Vautrin mirrors, decorative objects and collectibles on 1stDibs.