The history of BVLGARI – a name synonymous with precious jewels, striking design, vivid colours (and fine fragrances) – begins in a small Greek village, Epirus, where Sotirio Bulgari fashioned precious objects from silver.
In 1879, Sotirio crossed the Mediterranean to Naples, then moved on to Rome. It was the humblest of beginnings: he sold his silverware objects in front of the French Academy on the Pincio. Then a Greek merchant offered him the corner of a window in his shop on the via Sistina to showcase his wares. Customers loved them – and in 1884, Sotirio opened his first jewellery store, on that same street.
10 years later, he moved to the Via Condotti – renaming his shop ‘The Old Curiosity Shop’, from the Dickens novel, to act as a magnet to British and American tourists. It worked – and before long, Sotirio was beginning to make jewellery and accessories, as well as silver objects. But it was Sotirio’s sons, Giorgio and Constantino, who fell in love with precious stones, learned the secrets of the trade, and took BVLGARI to a new level. The Via Condotti store grew, and had a makeover. And after the tribulations of World War II came a turning point, embracing the classicism of the Greeks and Romans and the Italian Renaissance, to carve out the bold, distinctive style that we know BVLGARI for today. (The ‘V’ used in the Bulgari logo is taken from the Latin script that the house adopted as its signature, FYI.)
JASMIN_NOIRNew York. Paris. Geneva. Monte Carlo. By the 1970s, BVLGARI was beginning to conquer the world of luxury – and moved into watchmaking, too, with the Bulgari Bulgari watch becoming a classic. (In the 1980s, a Swiss watchmaking arm, Bulgari Time, was set up specially in Neuchâtel, to tap into the legendary expertise of watchmakers there.) Still a family business, by now Paolo and Nicola Bulgari – sons of Giorgio – were working in the business, together with their nephew Francesco Trapani.
To watch a BVLGARI gem take shape is to understand: this is art, as well as craftsmanship. Each begins with a watercolour or tempura drawing. Then the artisans take over, producing a jewel of polished perfection, sensual smoothness and roundness, with absolute attention to detail. As with all fashions, there’s been an evolution in BVLGARI’s signature style – but always retaining that focus on intriguing colour combinations, symmetry, and beautiful lines recalling art and architecture. As art historian and critic Amanda Triossi has observed, BVLGARI ‘attracts women with strong personalities.’ Boldness, she adds, is probably the jewellery house’s most outstanding characteristic.
Of course, there have been many one-offs – commissioned by the wealthiest and most glamorous people in the world. BVLGARI has created and dedicated unique jewels to Marilyn Monroe, Sophia Loren, Lauren Bacall, Sharon Stone, Charlize Theron, Angelina Jolie and more.
While in Rome shooting ‘Roman Holiday’ in 1953, Audrey Hepburn returned to the BVLGARI store time and again to buy precious objects, including evening bags, cigarette cases, compacts and a solid gold pin. (She also wore a BVLGARI string of pearls in the 1979 film ‘Blood Line’.) Gina Lollobrigida, meanwhile – that voluptuous and most sensual of Italian actresses – was bewitched by BVLGARI jewels, wearing them to dance cheek-to-cheek with Frank Sinatra in Never So Few.
Perhaps most famously of all, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton sealed their love with an 18.61 carat emerald, surrounded by pear-cut diamonds, later worn by this beautiful brunette movie star on her wedding day. To collect her Oscar for ‘Butterfield 8′, Taylor wore BVLGARI again – indeed, Richard Burton once joked that the only Italian word his wife knew was ‘Bulgari’.
JASMIN_NOIRThe BVLGARI ‘ready-to-wear’ jewellery collections, meanwhile, include the Sapphire Flower line, inspired by flowers and sapphires, with its exquisite timeless elegance. There’s Astrale, with its sweeping loops and moving motifs in diamonds and white gold. And Elisia, a sophisticated recent chapter in BVLGARI’s design history: oval motifs, white and yellow gold, showcasing multi-coloured sapphires, enamel, coral, emeralds, rubies and mother of pearl.
But in 1992, the launch of their debut scent – BVLGARI Eau Parfumée au Thé Vert – heralded an exciting new chapter in BVLGARI‘s glimmering history. Created by Jean-Claude Ellena, Eau Parfumée au Thé Vert takes the subtlest and finest aromas of green tea, blending citrus notes for a so-refreshing combination that’s fresh, delicate and sweet, all at the same time.
After the preceding decade of bold, extravagant scents, Eau Parfumée au Thé Vert was – and is – like walking into a still, calm room where you’ve time to think and breathe again. An instant classic, this so-cooling scent is loved by women and men alike. Victoria Frolova of the Boisdejasmin blog describes it as having ‘transparent softness and elegant minimalism’, adding: ‘for me, it does not so much evoke the aroma of green tea, as it conveys the freshness of morning air, the bitterness of fresh leaves, the sweetness of night-blooming jasmine dissipating as the sun comes up…’ (Today, you can also enjoy BVLGARI Thé Blanc, featuring notes of aromatic artemesia as well as musk, alongside the refreshing signature tea note.)
INDIAN_GARNETMore recently came Jasmin Noir, above, celebrating one of perfumery’s most precious flowers – designed to ‘express the seductive duality of a woman who at the same time appears fragile but also bewitching and deeply sensual.’ In 2011, Mon Jasmin Noir unfolded its petals, playing up jasmine’s vibrant lightness and luminous qualities.
The Omnia collection – with its unique ‘link’ bottle – offers scents inspired by semi-precious stones: Omnia Crystalline, an instant bestseller with its notes of lotus, sweet heliotrope and softly powdery iris, on a base of amber and white musk. Omnia Coral brings to life the vitality of polished coral in a fruity-floral perfect-for-summer scent, while the latest addition – BVLGARI Omnia Indian Garnet – is a modern tribute to a country that’s a kaleidoscope of textures, colours and scents: inspired by the mandarin garnet, constructed around a narcotic note of tuberose at its heart, alongside Chinese osmanthus.
As you can discover for yourself, the colours, the light, the smoothness and beauty of BVLGARI jewels have now been captured by some of the world’s leading perfumers for all of us to wear and enjoy.
And every one, when you take some time to explore them, proves really quite a gem…
www.bulgari.com