Bangkok Post

Largest diamond ever auctioned goes for $34m

- NINA LARSON

GENEVA: The largest diamond ever offered at auction went under the hammer in Geneva on Tuesday evening for nearly $34 million, a world record for a gem of its kind, the Christie’s auction house said.

The 163.41-carat flawless D colour diamond, suspended from an emerald and diamond necklace called The Art of Grisogono, sold for 33.5 million Swiss francs ($33.8 million), after taxes and commission­s, at the Christie’s autumn jewel auction.

“This marks a new world-record price for a D colour diamond at auction,” Rahul Kadakia, auctioneer and head of Christie’s internatio­nal jewels division, told AFP.

D is the highest colour grade attributed to a diamond, indicating that the stone is completely colourless, and thus extremely rare.

With a drawn-out round of rapid-fire bidding starting at 20 million francs, the necklace was finally sold to a telephone bidder, who wished to remain anonymous, for well above the asking price of 25 million francs.

But some had expected The Art of Grisogono, which Christie’s described as a “masterpiec­e of unparallel­led beauty and exquisite workmanshi­p”, to fetch even more.

“I am disappoint­ed that the Art of de Grisogono didn’t sell for a more dazzling price,” said Tobias Kormind, head of 77 Diamonds, a large European online diamond jeweller, who had said before the sale he thought the price might top $50 million.

The flawless, D colour 11A type diamond was cut from a 404-carat rough rock which was discovered in February 2016 in the Lulo mine in Angola — the 27th biggest rough white diamond ever discovered.

The rough was analysed in Antwerp and cut in New York, where a team of 10 diamond-cutting specialist­s were involved in mapping, plotting, cleaving, laser-cutting and polishing the giant rough rock into a polished, flawless diamond.

A team from Swiss luxury jeweller de Grisogono then created 50 different designs around the 163.41-carat diamond, before opting for an asymmetric necklace with the stone as its centrepiec­e.

The left side of the necklace is made up of 18 emerald-cut diamonds and the right side composed of two rows of pear-shaped emeralds.

Another highlight of Tuesday’s auction, a large pink diamond once set in the crowns of numerous French kings and emperors, including Napoleon, meanwhile sold for far more than the $6-9 million estimate.

The Le Grand Mazarin went under the hammer, again to an unidentifi­ed telephone bidder, for 12.5 million francs, with the final price tag after taxes and commission­s ticking in at 14.4 million francs ($14.5 million).

The gem was named after Cardinal Mazarin, an Italian cardinal and diplomat, as well as a great art collector, who

served as chief minister under Louis XIII and Louis XIV.

The pink stone, originally dug out of the ancient mines of Golconda in south-central India, sparkled on the crowns of Louis XV and Louis XVI, who was guillotine­d during the French Revolution.

And it graced the crown of Napoleon I, Napoleon III and Empress Eugenie, among others.

It has since passed through the hands of famous French jeweller Frederic Boucheron and later the Baron von Derwies.

Christie’s said the seller was a private collector, but did not reveal their identity.

Tuesday’s sale marked the first time the diamond appeared at auction in 130 years. It has been auctioned off once before: It was among the French Crown Jewels sold off in 1887 — 17 years after France’s Second Empire collapsed and Napoleon III and his wife Emperess Eugenie sought exile in England, leaving their jewels behind.

 ?? AFP ?? The 163.41-carat flawless D colour diamond is suspended from an emerald and diamond necklace called ‘The Art of Grisogono’.
AFP The 163.41-carat flawless D colour diamond is suspended from an emerald and diamond necklace called ‘The Art of Grisogono’.
 ?? AFP ?? ‘Le Grand Mazarin’ is a large pink diamond once set in the crowns of numerous French kings and emperors.
AFP ‘Le Grand Mazarin’ is a large pink diamond once set in the crowns of numerous French kings and emperors.

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