I’m a sucker for the man in the moon theme…it was very popular during the Victorian era but it’s a motif that still turns heads.
This bracelet by Anthony Lent is shown here in 18k yellow gold (with matching rings from the collection) for USD$11,500 but it is also available in sterling silver for USD$980.
The designer’s site notes, “The celestial collection, our largest collection of jewelry pieces today, tells a story about the cosmos; a journey through the heavens and through the history of art. The collection draws on Tony’s interests in artisan horology, early timekeeping, and the marvelous mechanisms of the Renaissance that combined art and science together. If time and astronomy were even more intimately connected in that age of sundials and planetary prognostication, they were also connected to magic, and the motions of the heavenly bodies were believed to be keys to the secrets of nature. This moonface is an adaptation of one that Tony Lent saw years ago in 19th century illustrations. He refers to it now as the “moon of the collective unconscious”. The moonface represented in Lent’s work is an iteration of those that appear in works by Maxfield Parrish, N. C. Wyeth, and the early animation of Winsor McCay.”
