Overview
A bold, sculptural piece of mid-century costume jewelry featuring a complex double-link construction in heavy brass. The design utilizes an interlocking 'S' curve motif that creates a dense, architectural texture on the wrist.
Preliminary identification
Photo reference
1 uploaded photo
Overview
A bold, sculptural piece of mid-century costume jewelry featuring a complex double-link construction in heavy brass. The design utilizes an interlocking 'S' curve motif that creates a dense, architectural texture on the wrist.
Story
Post-war artists rejected delicate gems for raw, industrial metals. This bracelet represents the 'Brutalist' movement, where jewelry became wearable sculpture. It was designed to be seen from across a room, not just up close.
Maker / Origin
While unsigned, this piece reflects the influence of designers like Jerry Fels (Renoir/Matisse) or the Scandinavian modernists who popularized textured brass. These makers treated non-precious metals with the same artistic reverence as gold, sparking a revolution in department store fashion.
Condition & Value
The piece shows a heavy, authentic patina consistent with age. There is some visible wear to the finish on the clasp mechanism, which is common for high-friction areas. This 'aged' look is actually preferred by many collectors of this style. Condition is good and does not significantly detract from value.
Full Research
Sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance pulled from recent auction results.
Build on this identification
Layer in sold comps, value drivers, and venue guidance.
Comparable demand stays strongest where maker, originality, and venue confidence line up. Broader examples still trade, but the range tightens quickly when provenance, condition, or selling lane fit is missing.
Best Venue
Specialty auction or a focused dealer with buyers already in this lane.
Signed example with light edge wear and original frame.
Comparable format with stronger provenance and cleaner surface.
Smaller related piece with visible craquelure and trimmed margins.
Period match with softer condition and weaker subject matter.
Close market lane comp with similar material and presentation.