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Necklace in the archaeological revival style

Possibly by: Castellani (Italian, 1814–1930)
Italian (Rome)
19th century
about 1880
Object Place: Europe, Italy

Medium/Technique Gold and amber
Dimensions Length: 51.5 cm (20 1/4 in.)
Credit Line Bequest of William Arnold Buffum
Accession Number02.91
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsEurope, Jewelry
Buffum eventually donated his collection of 164 amber works to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in 1902. The objects were of the highest caliber and included reliquaries, chess sets, statuettes, jewelry caskets (see p. 86–87), and personal adornments. Among the jewels, the most significant is this suite in the archaeological revival style. Buffum was closely involved in its design, having based it on a multihued amber necklace worn by a young woman he met while vacationing in Sicily. He noted that the gems in the necklace ranged in color from "faint blue to deepest azure, from pale rose to intense, pigeon blood, ruby red."1 By the time Buffum acquired the amber for this necklace, however, the availability of Sicilian specimens in a range of hues had greatly diminished.
Yvonne J. Markowitz, “Necklace in the Archeological Revival Style” in Artful Adornments: Jewelry from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston by Yvonne J. Markowitz (Boston: MFA Publications, 2011), 84-85.

DescriptionThe amber can be removed from setting. Part of a suite that includes a brooch (02.92) and pair of earrings (02.93-02.94). There is a removable segment at the back of the necklace to make it shorter.
Marks Unmarked
ProvenanceMade for William Arnold Buffum; 1902, bequest of William Arnold Buffum to the MFA. (Accession date: January 1, 1901)