Georg Jensen Woman Bangle Stainless Steel Watch #336 in Mid-Century Modern Classic Luxury Style
Georg Jensen woman bangle stainless steel watch #336 in classic, Mid-Century Modern style, designed by Vivianna Torun Bülow-Hübe, with a stainless steel band and case with a Swiss, battery-powered quartz movement. It is water-resistant up to 6 ATM. The watch comes with its original box and packaging, making it a perfect gift for any occasion. The bangle band is small-sized and the case has a diameter of 23 mm. This watch is guaranteed to be genuine
As much a piece of jewelry as a timepiece, the Vivianna bangle watch truly deserves the term iconic. Designed in 1969, it is a masterpiece of understated Scandinavian design with its mirrored face and integrated case and bangle which wraps gracefully around the wrist. Minimalist and yet striking, the watch is perfect for any woman with a definite sense of her own style. Designer Vivianna Torun Bülow-Hübe’s uncompromising and innovative work almost defines mid-century Scandinavian design.
Danish silversmith Georg Jensen (1866-1935) set up his own silver business in 1904 in Copenhagen. Jensen's training in metalsmithing, along with his education in the fine arts, allowed him to combine the two disciplines and revive the tradition of the artist craftsman. Soon, the beauty and quality of his creations caught the eye of the public and his success was assured. In 1912, expansion of his studio began in earnest. By 1917, he had built a workshop brimming with hundreds of employees. Jensen was awarded the Grand Prix at the world exhibition in Paris in 1925 and again in Barcelona in 1929. The sale of Jensen silver went really well and in the early 1930s there were Jensen shops in Paris, London, Berlin, Brussels, Geneva, Barcelona, Stockholm, St. Thomas, Buenos Aires and New York apart from the ones in Denmark. By his death in 1935, Georg Jensen was an international house of design where inspired artisans carried on a tradition of blending expert craftsmanship with forward-thinking design. In his obituary the New York Herald Tribune called him “the greatest silversmith of the last 300 years.”
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