Wartski

Wartski is a British family firm of antique dealers specialising in Russian works of art; particularly those by Carl Fabergé, fine jewellery and silver. Founded in North Wales in 1865, the business is located at 60 St James's Street, London, SW1. The company holds royal appointments as jewellers to the Queen and the Prince of Wales.

Wartski
TypeLimited company
IndustryJewellers and silversmiths
Founded1865
FounderMorris Wartski
Headquarters60 St. James's Street,
London, SW1A 1LE
,
England
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Emanuel Snowman, Nicholas Snowman, Katherine Purcell, Kieran McCarthy
ProductsFine Jewellery
Works of Art
Works by Carl Fabergé
WebsiteWartski.com

History

Morris Wartski's first shop on High Street, Bangor, North Wales
Wartski Fields in Bangor, Wales

The firm was founded in Bangor, North Wales in 1865 by Morris Wartski, a Polish-Jewish[1][2] immigrant from the town of Turek,[3] in central Poland. Wartski firstly established a jewellery business on Bangor's High Street and then a drapery store. His son, Isidore, went on to develop the drapery business and to create a large, fashionable, store. He also developed the Castle Inn on High Street in Bangor, into the high-class Castle Hotel. He was a popular mayor of the city and a patron of local sports and charities. Wartski Fields were bequeathed to the city and people of Bangor by his widow, Winifred Marie, in memory of Isidore Wartski.

Another of Morris's sons went on to develop the jewellery part of the business into an international player. Morris Wartski's two sons, Harry and Charles, went into the business but when Charles was injured in a cycling accident, the business was moved in 1907 to the seaside town of Llandudno for the sake of his health. The Marquess of Anglesey was the best customer and David Lloyd George was engaged as the firm's lawyer. When Charles died in 1914, Harry ran the business with his father Morris and two brothers-in-law S. M. Benjamin and Emanuel Snowman.

After the death of Morris Wartski and Benjamin, Harry was joined in the business in Llandudno by his son, Charles Wartski, and a nephew, Cecil Manson. A second jewellery and antique establishment was opened in Mostyn street, Llandudno. So fond of Llandudno was Harry Wartski that when the firm opened a branch in London's New Bond Street in 1911, it was given the name of Wartski of Llandudno.

Wartski on 14 Grafton Street, London (2011)

The firm moved via premises in the Quadrant Arcade, Regent Street, 139 Regent Street and 14 Grafton Street, Mayfair. The firm's distinctive shop-front on Grafton Street, designed by John Bruckland in 1974, was Grade II listed by English Heritage in 2012.[4] It is a rare survival of innovative twentieth century retail architecture in Mayfair. In 2018 Wartski moved to larger premises at 60 St. James Street, London, the concrete lined interior was designed by the architects Waldo Works.

With the Russian revolution, many of the aristocracy took with them large quantities of jewellery made by Carl Fabergé, jeweller to the Tsar. The pieces found their way into shops all over Europe. Harry Wartski painstakingly tracked them down and bought them for his shop. He and Snowman also bought some pieces from the Soviet government, whose collection attracted Royal patronage to the firm. Emanuel Snowman travelled to the USSR from 1925 onwards to negotiate the purchase of former Romanov jewels and objets d'art from the Antiquariat, a commissariat established by the Bolsheviks to raise foreign currency.

When King Farouk was deposed, Kenneth Snowman (Emmanuel Snowman's son) went to Cairo to buy up some of the Egyptian crown jewels which also included many Fabergé pieces.

Wartski, 60 St. James's Street, London

(Abraham) Kenneth Snowman (1919–2002), ran the London shop and wrote standard works, The Art of Carl Fabergé (1953), followed by Carl Fabergé: Goldsmith to the Imperial Court of Russia and Eighteenth Century Gold Boxes of Europe (1966), written at the urging of Sacheverell Sitwell. As a curator, Snowman organised the exhibitions of Fabergé at the Victoria and Albert Museum (1977) and at the Cooper-Hewitt Museum, New York (1983). He was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries in 1994 and appointed CBE for his services to the arts and to charitable institutions in 1997.

Present-day

Wartski is owned by Nicholas Snowman, son of Kenneth and great-grandson of Morris Wartski. Katherine Purcell and Kieran McCarthy are joint managing directors of the company. Katherine Purcell is a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, Vice-chairman of the Society of Jewellery Historians and a Liveryman of the Goldsmiths’ Company. Her speciality is French nineteenth-century jewellery and she has written articles on various subjects including the Parisian firm of jewellers Falize, the master of Art Nouveau René Lalique, and on the influence of Japanese works of art on Western jewellery and goldsmiths’ work. She authored the definitive study Falize: A Dynasty of Jewellers (1999) and translated into English Henri Vever’s French Jewellery of the Nineteenth Century (2001).[5] Amongst the exhibitions she has curated for Wartski are ‘Fabergé and the Russian Jewellers’ (2006), ‘Japonisme: From Falize to Fabergé’ (2011) and ‘Fabergé – A Private Collection’ (2012).

Kieran McCarthy is a freeman of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths and a Fellow of the Gemmological Association. He is a member of the advisory board of the Fabergé Museum in St Petersburg.[6] In 2014, he revealed the existence of the lost Third Imperial Fabergé Easter Egg and exhibited it for the first time in 112 years. Kieran has published widely and authored Fabergé in London (2017), an in-depth study of Fabergé’s London branch and its customers.[7] Thomas Holman is the other director working at the firm. Geoffrey Munn was previously managing director.

In 2011, Wartski made the ring for the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton.[8] The ring was fashioned from a piece of Welsh gold given to Prince William by Queen Elizabeth II. In 2005, Wartski made the wedding rings for Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall.[9]

Wartski were sole sponsors of 'Bejewelled Treasures', an exhibition of Indian and Indian-influenced jewellery from The Al Thani Collection staged at the Victoria and Albert Museum from November 2015 to March 2016.[10]

In July 2018 Wartski sponsored the book Designers & Jewellery 1850–1940: Jewellery & Metalwork from the Fitzwilliam Museum by Helen Ritchie which accompanied an exhibition of the same name held at the Museum. [11]

An exhibition of engraved gems entitled ‘Multum in Parvo’ (a Latin motto which translates as 'much in little'), was staged at Wartski in October 2019. Curated by Thomas Homan, it included works by the most notable gem engravers of the 18th and 19th centuries and several gems from the fabled collection of George Spencer, 4th Duke of Marlborough and Classical antiquity. A collector queued day and night outside the shop over the weekend before it opened in order to be the first to view the show.

References

  1. "Royal jeweller Wartski celebrates 150 years with sponsorship and book". Campden FB. 24 November 2015. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  2. "Loading..." Jewishlivesproject.com. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  3. Munn, Geoffrey. "Wartski: The First One Hundred and Fifty Years" (PDF). www.ingentaconnect.com. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
  4. "Shop Front to Wartski, 14 Grafton Street, London, W1S 4DE". English Heritage. Retrieved 3 May 2014.
  5. "Henri Vever: French Jewelry of the Nineteenth Century". Thamesandhudson.com. 2 July 2001. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  6. "Royal wedding: Anglesey leads celebrations across Wales - BBC News". BBC News. Bbc.co.uk. 29 April 2011. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  7. Singh, Anita (29 April 2011). "Royal wedding: Kate Middleton to wear band of traditional Welsh gold". Telegraph. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  8. "Bejewelled Treasures: The Al Thani Collection - About the Exhibition - Victoria and Albert Museum". Vam.ac.uk. 21 November 2015. Retrieved 23 November 2019.
  9. "Designers & Jewellery 1850 –1940: Jewellery & Metalwork from The Fitzwilliam Museum". Wartski. Retrieved 23 November 2019.

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