Studio 54 Radio

Christopher Walling makes a guest appearance on Studio 54 Radio’s “The Marc & Myra Show.

Christopher Walling Studio 54
Erin Diebboll
Interview with Dr. Sharon Novak of Beekman New York

Episode 27: Firsthand with Suzanne Belperron and Paul Flato


In the 1980s, already well into his own career as a high jewelry designer, Christopher Walling wrote to both Suzanne Belperron and Paul Flato and ended up interviewing both about their legendary design careers. Hear his account of their conversations, a detailed discussion of some of their legendary creations as well as to see his own work and to learn about his path to jewelry design. We take viewer questions throughout. Interested viewers can also view additional imagery at the Beekman New York instagram @beekmannewyork as well as to listen to the full interview at the Beekman New York Fine Jewelry Podcast on iTunes.

Each episode of the series features a conversation between Dr. Sharon Novak, certified gemologist and co-founder of Beekman New York, and an industry expert within the luxury space, highlighting their shared joy and appreciation of fine jewelry. Topics include mixing period jewelry with modern pieces, heritage and craftsmanship of luxury jewelry houses worldwide, certfied natural and phenomenal gems and collecting vintage jewelry.

Erin Diebboll
[The Culture Of Pearls] Jeweller Par Excellence and a Trail Blazer in so many ways

By Reema Farooqui

It is rare to come across a fine jewellery designer whose design repertoire is as panoramic as that of Christopher Walling. From very modern, contemporary and edgy pieces all the way to jewellery designs evoking the romance of bygone times, Christopher's fine jewellery pieces are breathtaking in every sense of the word.

His influence on modern jewellery is undeniable. Described by Sotheby’s as “undoubtedly one of the most exciting jewelry designers on the scene today,” Christopher has changed the crafting of modern, very fine jewellery in many innovative ways. Known for his brilliant use of rare natural as well as baroque pearls and his bezel-set gemstone inlays in pearls, Christopher's jewellery pieces bring together very unique and trendy elements of design to create a marvellous symphony of colour, shapes and textures. His list of clients includes among many, international royalty, A-list celebrities and leading philanthropists of our time-a testament to the wide appeal of Christopher’s jewellery design aesthetic. While there have been many jewellery designers who have found inspiration from his work, none, in my opinion, have ever come close to his creative genius.

Christopher is warm, very insightful and has an almost encyclopaedic knowledge on a vast number of subjects. He is also a natural storyteller and his arsenal of anecdotes are as interesting as they are entertaining. Outside of jewellery, Christopher is a reader who is interested in world politics, history (which in his case is definitely intersectional with jewellery), travelling and catching up with his thousands of friends. However, in his more quiet moments, you can find him training his ivy and taking care of his orchids, the pride of his lovely conservatory.

In my interview, I asked Christopher about his journey to becoming a jewellery designer, his creative process and also some memorable pieces of jewellery he has designed over the years.

Christopher Walling, Egypt 2014

Christopher Walling, Egypt 2014

You studied Political Science at the University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University but then chose to become a jewellery designer. Could you tell us why you chose jewellery design as your career and about your journey to becoming a jewellery designer? 

Easy: I was passionate about archaeology and realized I was not about to dig up another King Tutankhamun's tomb...on Cape Cod! And trying to culture pearls in my aquarium had been a bust! I was studying Political Science in the hope of following the path of a number of my relatives and ancestors but came to realize that - in the age telephones, etc. - diplomats had become mere ciphers of Presidents and Secretaries of State, much less fun. I did however enjoy traveling on a Diplomatic Passport the first years of my life!

Silver Plated Copper and Sterling Silver "Walling Egg" Inspired by Faberge, Crafted at 14 years of age

Silver Plated Copper and Sterling Silver "Walling Egg" Inspired by Faberge, Crafted at 14 years of age

Indian Head Nickel Ring, Exercise in Sawing at 8 years of age, Christopher Walling Jewelry

Indian Head Nickel Ring, Exercise in Sawing at 8 years of age, Christopher Walling Jewelry

And when the RMS Lusitania sank (1915), one of our very first women architects and art collectors Theodate Pope Riddle was on it. When she saw 1157 men give up their lives so that women and children could get into the lifeboats, she made a vow that she would design, build and endow a boarding school for boys, if she survived. She did. Theodate Pope Riddle (a cousin of the great architect Philip Johnson) built Avon Old Farms at a personal cost of $ 7 million of that day. It was stuffy, but she insisted that each of the boys also pick a craft to learn, and my beloved father chose to learn jewelry making as a craft at that school and when I was eight, he taught me; so I guess jewelry chose ME! 

It also didn't "hurt" that - hours after I was born (in Paris) - Dad went out, bought a suite of jewelry and laid it over my sleeping mother so it would be the first thing she would see when she woke. As Diana Vreeland wrote, "If you can arrange to be born in Paris, the rest of your life will turn out just fine.” Not to generalize! My mother would periodically open her jewel case in later years to show them to me and this became one of my definitions of love. She was also a much- decorated French Catholic WW2 hero - who survived torture in three prisons as well as a year in Ravensbrück Concentration Camp at the end of that horror and carried the resultant PTSD with her. Giving her jewelry became a way for me to try to make her happy, too...

Nor that I rarely ever saw my father's Russian-born mother - even on the beach - without the tasteful, unobtrusive diamond necklace her in-laws had given her for her wedding; however her choker had originally been an upscale chain...which reached to the floor and which as a prominent socialist she politely returned to them asking if she could keep just fifteen inches of it!

Fancy Cut Black Jade with Pink Diamond Pave Set in 18K Rose Gold, Carvin French

Fancy Cut Black Jade with Pink Diamond Pave Set in 18K Rose Gold, Carvin French

Can you describe your process of jewellery creation? Where do you draw your inspiration from?  

As I'm one of the few designers who KNOWS how to make jewelry from A-Z: I am surely just about the only jeweler alive who learned how to solder by blowing through a pipette across an alcohol flame and focusing the point of the flame on the object to be soldered- no? Or learned how to use the hair-thin-bladed jeweler's saws by cutting the Indian out of Indian Head Nickels; hard, very hard indeed...it was totally a hands-on thing for me until I was in my early 30s...and first had co-workers. When I did have co-workers, they'd occasionally collapse in laughter when they’d see the unnecessarily convoluted methods I'd developed, working in isolation...to achieve my desired effects... AFTER I was established, I did take courses in enameling, granulation and lapidary - at Kulicke-Starke, in NYC. BUT I am NONETHELESS very much mainly self-taught... I wasn't doing what teachers might have wanted me to do nor was my work influenced by their work. A serious danger in art schools! Ditto the commercial jewelry world. 

Architecture, paintings, museums, the gems themselves, color and four thousand years of jewelry inspire me. That said, I would be remiss not to mention the great workshops with which I have been privileged to work. First and foremost, the Dean of NY Jewelers (and then some) jewelers:  Maître André Chervin - at Carvin French. The late Carlos Holub - who had been an essential part of David Webb's team, was a great treasure I stumbled across, too. Max and Irina Semyonov, Ian Ionescu and others have been crucial to my work as well. Their impeccable natures and humor is an additional gift; for example, André Chervin jokingly said to me in the early 80s - well before the advent of Mr. Trump's friends going to jail constantly - when other people one knew of were occasionally going to jail, "you know, Christopher, people go to jail for all sorts of reasons these days: for a vacation, to work-out in the gyms, to study in their libraries..." As a book-end to that, a dear British journalist friend said to me: "I never met anyone who had been to jail before I moved to Palm Beach..."


Carved Spinel and Cast Gold Earrings with Yellow Sapphires, Set in "Gun Metal Effect" Oxidized Sterling Silver and 18K Yellow Gold; Carved Emerald and MultiGem Earrings, Set in "Gun Metal Effect" Oxidized Sterling Silver and 18K Yellow Gold, Carlos …

Carved Spinel and Cast Gold Earrings with Yellow Sapphires, Set in "Gun Metal Effect" Oxidized Sterling Silver and 18K Yellow Gold; Carved Emerald and MultiGem Earrings, Set in "Gun Metal Effect" Oxidized Sterling Silver and 18K Yellow Gold, Carlos Holub

Also, Museums; I have tried to visit every museum (and collection of Royal gems) that I possibly could. Topkapi twelve times; The Hermitage many times - even in 1992, during the utter political and economic chaos there, before 1994 when I became a founding member of The American Friends of the Hermitage Museum - speaking Russian helped; the Poldi Pezzoli in 1980 (the home of one of the few surviving jewels by Benvenuto Cellini); Museums in mainland China and Japan in 1983; Dresden's fabled Green Vaults (3,500 jewels and jeweled objects), Munich's and Berlin's in 1985; India's, Nepal's and Thailand's in 1993; Vienna's (home of Benvenuto Cellini's exquisite "Salt-cellar,” currently valued at more than $40 million); Prague's and Budapest’s in 1994; Madrid in 2007 to see Benvenuto Cellini's EXTRAORDINARY "Christ;" Egypt's in 2014, Denmark’s and Sweden’s in 2017; France and England's: constantly; and so forth.

Pink Quartz Crystals with Mirror-Cut Morganite Prisms Necklace, Set in 18K White Gold

Pink Quartz Crystals with Mirror-Cut Morganite Prisms Necklace, Set in 18K White Gold

We are long generations in my family so - in effect - my grandfathers (whom I never knew; but I did know my grandmothers and many more of similar ages) could have as well been my great-great grandfathers; this to explain why parts of my aesthetic - and mores - are more of the 1800s than of the 21st century...

One thing which humbles me and gives me great pleasure is that I often buy gems and realize when I get to my office that they "go" perfectly with stones I bought ten, twenty, thirty years ago...had put in the back of my safe and... forgotten!

Natural Conch Pearl and Mississippi Pearls Flower Pin with Diamond Baguettes, Set in 18K White Gold, Maximara

Natural Conch Pearl and Mississippi Pearls Flower Pin with Diamond Baguettes, Set in 18K White Gold, Maximara

Jade Pin with Carved and Faceted Emeralds, Rubies, Sapphires and Diamonds, Set in 18K Yellow Gold, Maximara

Jade Pin with Carved and Faceted Emeralds, Rubies, Sapphires and Diamonds, Set in 18K Yellow Gold, Maximara

Some of your most iconic jewellery pieces feature the Biwa X pearl. What attracted you to these pearls in the first place? 

Renaissance jewelry. I'd always been intrigued by and very much aware of the baroque pearls which largely figured in it – usually as bodies of mermaids, heroes, boats and swans; when I discovered a parcel of X-shaped baroque pearls in one of the hundreds of dealer's offices high up in 47th Street's towers which I visited early on, I promptly started buying everyone I could lay my hand on and they became my "signature!" Well before Tiffany started producing "abstract X" earrings.

Biwa X Pearls Earrings in 18K Yellow Gold, Christopher Walling

Biwa X Pearls Earrings in 18K Yellow Gold, Christopher Walling

South Sea Pearl and Black Diamonds in 18K White Gold, Maximara (Currently living in Palm Springs)

South Sea Pearl and Black Diamonds in 18K White Gold, Maximara (Currently living in Palm Springs)

Have you ever experienced a creativity block, something like a writer’s block? If so, what did you do to overcome it? 

Of course. Usually and sadly it has come to me when I didn't feel I had the funds to make this or that new piece...I get deflated, unfortunately. While clients whose creative input is great do exist, they are rare and with all due respect many people actually cannot visualize at all...so...ironically...even the precise watercolor renderings we use, followed perfectly, have occasionally led to clients saying the finished piece is not what they had in mind. But more to the point, their infrequent creative input can lead me to feel that I'm being asked to make a piece NOT of my design...and I, from time to time, cramp. Plus, as I can design a jewel from $5,000 to millions of dollars, a client who is not willing to share some parameters about their budget is frustrating as well as time-wasting...which also blocks me as I approach a project. Often, I find their budget is actually more than they've said - preferably before I finish the commission!

"Positive Negative" Carved Agate Cuff with Freshwater Baroque Pearl, Set in 18K White Gold ; "Positive Negative" Agate and Freshwater Baroque Pearls Set in 18K White Gold, Matrix

"Positive Negative" Carved Agate Cuff with Freshwater Baroque Pearl, Set in 18K White Gold ; "Positive Negative" Agate and Freshwater Baroque Pearls Set in 18K White Gold, Matrix

What is the most memorable piece of jewellery you have designed and why is it so special to you?

 Hmmm...tough question. My pink diamond "Quince Blossoms" earrings are one of the finest pieces I've made...Elizabeth Taylor visited them five times and then had her administrative assistant suggest that I should give them to her. Cora Diamonds financed that piece and the Argyle Diamond Mines in Australia financed a separate pink diamond Cw collection!

Pink and White Diamond, Olivine and Tsavorite Pave "Quince Blossoms" Earrings, Set in 18K Yellow, Rose and White Gold, Carvin French

Pink and White Diamond, Olivine and Tsavorite Pave "Quince Blossoms" Earrings, Set in 18K Yellow, Rose and White Gold, Carvin French

I have a client who loves the color blue and who has a simply astonishing eye. She owns several of my very best pieces (including my 50 ct. Sugarloaf Cabochon Sapphire Trellis ring and my Paraiba Tourmaline Pavé and Aquamarine "Aspen Leaf" pin) and the carte blanche in terms of design and expense that I was given for the pieces in this sentence, always, luckily ensured that they turned out pretty spectacularly. But carte blanche is unusual. Another client has donated most of her vast Cw collection to a museum she and her husband founded...very flattering indeed...as are the many generous and frankly fascinating collectors-USUALLY ALSO COLLECTORS OF PAINTINGS & SCULPTURE AND ALSO MUSEUM BOARD MEMBERS- who support my work!

Kashmir Sapphire and Sapphire Trellis set in Platinum, Carvin French

Kashmir Sapphire and Sapphire Trellis set in Platinum, Carvin French

"Aspen Leaf" Brooch with Aquamarine, Paraiba Tourmaline Pave and Diamonds, Set in 18 k White Gold and Oxidized Silver, Maximara (Both pieces currently living up and down the East Coast)

"Aspen Leaf" Brooch with Aquamarine, Paraiba Tourmaline Pave and Diamonds, Set in 18 k White Gold and Oxidized Silver, Maximara (Both pieces currently living up and down the East Coast)

Another interesting anecdote relates to my Pink Carved Sapphire Lion, Diamond Pavé and Tourmaline Briolette Drop Necklace. Shortly after this necklace appeared in "W" I received a phone call from someone's social secretary asking the price - but also saying "My employer is so famous that I can't tell WHO she is." I laughed and said, "Please don't think I’m laughing at you - I know you have been told to say that...when she feels free to tell me her name, please feel free to call me back." And I hung up.  She called back minutes later to share Ivana Trump's name. (The Trumps had just hit Manhattan - from Queens, already legends in their minds, No.)

Biwa Pink Pearls with Carved Pink Sapphire Lion, Diamond Pave and Tourmaline Briolette Drop Pendant, Christopher Walling Jewelry

Biwa Pink Pearls with Carved Pink Sapphire Lion, Diamond Pave and Tourmaline Briolette Drop Pendant, Christopher Walling Jewelry

Tell us something about the spectacular Abalone pearl named the “Christopher Walling Pearl”, after you? How did this come about? 

It is a 187 ct. iridescent green Abalone pearl which was exhibited at the Smithsonian in the same gallery as the Hope Diamond - a huge thrill! I found it at the Tucson Gem show - where I always find one piece that a dealer has had to buy in a lot and for which they have no particular empathy. That was the case with the abalone pearl; in my defense, I did immediately go to the phone, call my office and say: "I can't possibly buy this pearl, knowing that it is worth at least 100 times what they are asking for it." My office replied: "Get OFF the phone, go straight to the dealer AND BUY IT!" Nick Paspaley - the King of Australian Pearl "Farmers" - traded it with me for a parcel of his own pearls AND asked ME what I wished it to be named - an extraordinarily generous friend and wonderful guy!  (BY the way, one of my great-great grandfathers was one of the first Regents of the Smithsonian.)

Christopher+Walling+16.jpg

What, if anything, has been the most challenging aspect of being a jewellery designer and maker? 

 Funding. Selling to stores as opposed to clients and - believe it or not - getting beautiful women to try on a jewel! I, after 62 years of my own experience, often know what will look fantastic on them. A factor is that most jewelry looks better on than in flat cases and that some women feel wedded to the ditsy jewelry their father or mother gave them (or their husbands in the earlier years of married life). Alas, it is sometimes just the desire to say "no," which I find incomprehensible. Sadly, many times it is because they don't realize how beautiful they themselves are. I have had clients who refused pieces their husbands wanted to gift them with - and some who lived to "rue the day" they'd turned down such a gift when they ended up divorcing...and have told me so, themselves.

"Oak Leaf"in Carved Green Chrysoprase with Emeralds, Set in Ridged 18K Yellow Gold, Ion Ionescu
" Oak Leaf" in Carved Lemon Chrysoprase with Yellow Sapphires, Set in Ridged 18K Yellow Gold, Ion Ionescu

You are one of the few Jewellery designers to call Madame Belperron as well as Paul Flato, your friend. How did you strike up these friendships? What are your most cherished memories from them? 

It's hard to believe, but - in the early 1980s both Mme. Belperron AND Paul Flato were virtually forgotten except by a handful of elderly clients and manufacturers. Terrified that their work would indeed pass into obscurity I wrote both of them asking if I could come visit them - in Paris and Mexico City, respectively - go over their archives, their jewels and  interview them in the hopes of having something meaningful to continue their great legacies by having notes to hand over to some future author/s or companies. They both instantly agreed, and I promptly spent a week with Mme. Belperron and ten days with Paul Flato. Memories? Mme. Belperron saying to my mother - whom I had taken with me the first day I visited, as she was French and my French is good but not perfect - deflecting a compliment by saying: "What exquisite French you speak, Madame," the story behind the ring she made for her husband and - when I asked if her Legion d'Honneur was for her art or for work in the Resistance - replying : "It is for my jewelry but I hope you don't think I was on the side of cowards during the war?" In fact, I worshipped her so much that - on the way to first meet her - I did something I had never done before nor have done since: I threw up in the street from nervousness. Flato: greeting me with "I'm sure you've heard all sorts of terrible things about me and... they are all true!"

outh Sea and Abalone Pearls, Daimond Pave and Diamond Baguettes, Set in 18K Yellow Gold and Oxidized Silver

I will say, as an aside, that before I went to Mexico City, I spent time in the sub-sub-sub basements of New York’s Federal Court Building (with rats, spiders etc.) researching through cartons and cartons of ancient papers and printing endless microfiche (!) about Flato - myself - minutes before they were thrown out. Re Paul Flato’s fall from grace and conviction to prison…my findings were quite different from some of the things I see written about him. Likewise, most of the things I learned about Mme. Belperron and Paul Flato came straight from their lips.

ose Fully Articulated Earrings with Pink Diamond and Olivine Pave, Set in 18K Yellow Gold, Carvin French (Currently living in Los Angeles!)

I also had the extraordinary luck to be invited by Nick Paspaley onto his pearling fleets, with him, off the north coast of Australia, during their annual pearl harvest – which included some of the best days of my life! He later asked me to write an article for Paspaley Magazine, which I gladly did. Half of it had to be ditched because in writing about his techniques-which keep pearling oysters happier than at any pearl farm, hence his spectacular pearls - I hadn’t realized I was writing about proprietary material! and his responses to why I was NOT going to be diving from his yacht-like ships were truly hysterical: I felt like I was in our (formerly) wild, wild West. where the final stage of his pearl culture takes place is an area of RED islands and CELADON seas with which those White "yachts" and the WHITE "flying boats" (planes from the 1940s) combine to create unbelievable beauty…

Pink Sapphire Set in 18K White Gold and Steel, Carvin French, (Currently living in New York)

If you were to write The Great American Novel today, what would it be about and what would you call it? 

 "Unexpected Coincidences." 

You have led a very interesting and storied life, starting with your childhood in Africa. Did moving around with your family in your formative years influence you as a jewellery designer and maker? 

Yes, it did - and my childhood started in Paris, then Beirut, then the depths of the West African jungle...as my father was an administrator in the first ten years of the United Nations. The staggering poise of - as well as the amazing colors of the clothes worn by - the African women I lived amongst from when I was three all the way to five years old, have never left me. Other "travels" exposed me, additionally, to family and friends of my parents - American, French, especially Russian, German and so on, who themselves or their ancestors had had extraordinary jewelry and with the changing of the world had had to sell their "important" pieces. What they had kept were the small pieces by Faberge, Cartier, etc. which were then worthless (and which are worth a fortune now) but which display the highest excellence of design and work-person-ship. They became my "dictionary," thank God, not the Harry Winston/Graff school of jewelry - of which Fulco di Verdura famously said "Jewelry is not Minerology." In fact, whenever I have been able to, I have bought the very jewels which influenced me most from the estates of our late friends and relatives! What also informed me - folks may be surprised to hear - was working in construction - summers - on the beautiful houses my father designed and built in the second half of his life...himself. I thereby learned the value of money as well as many, many ways to feel capable in the physical world - to maneuver more freely through life. I find so many young people today don't have the vaguest idea how to make anything - and I feel very sorry for them.

Emerald and Sapphire Paisley Earrings with Detachable and Reversible Drops, Set in 18K Yellow Gold, Carlos Holub (Ex David Webb star)(Currently living in between Rio and Gstaad)
Bronze Tennessee Wing Natural Freshwater Pearl and Golden South Sea Baroque Pearl and Diamond Earrings, Set in 18K Yellow Gold (Currently living in Houston)

Your list of clients includes a veritable galaxy of stars and notable public figures. However, since you are a reader of history, who would be that one person from history whom you would love to design jewellery for and why?

Augustus the Strong, Elector of Saxony (who founded Dresden's “Green Vaults!”). Had I known that The Berlin Wall was going to go down, I would have waited to go to Dresden- going to Dresden in EAST Germany before THE WALL came down was incredibly difficult. However, I started laughing out loud the minute I walked into the Green Vaults with a friend asked why; I replied, "because one look is all I need to know that Augustus the Strong - who had brilliantly made his court jeweler and his court sculptor work TOGETHER - told them: "I don't care how long it takes and I don't care how much it costs...do your very BEST!" Definitely the 5th Marquess of Anglesey and Charles, Duke of Brunswick.

Abalone Pearl, Lightning Ridge Opal and Multi Sapphire Flower Pin, Set in 18K Gold

Abalone Pearl, Lightning Ridge Opal and Multi Sapphire Flower Pin, Set in 18K Gold

Freshwater Fancy Pearl Pin with Chrysoberyl and Diamond Baguettes, Set in 18K Yellow Gold

Freshwater Fancy Pearl Pin with Chrysoberyl and Diamond Baguettes, Set in 18K Yellow Gold

Pauline de Rothschild or Catherine the Great or Louis XV's great mistress, Mme. de Pompadour (who - btw - carved gems in her spare time; a number of Royals of their days delighted in turning wood, amber and ivory on lathes - go figure!). In other words, women with the most exalted taste and standards imaginable. I have had the amazing fortune to work with several of our age's chicest women...including the late great style-icon and philanthropist, New York's own Lily Auchincloss (who bought a pair of my X pearl earrings, wore them and... half of the ultra-fashionable, international world instantly beat a path to my door), the great late Parisian hostess Saõ Schlumberger, Ambassador the Honorable, late Ambassador Anne Cox Chambers and others who do not wish to be named. And we were all blessed to become great, great friends...of Saõ, two stories occur to me: I was in her Hotel Particulier next to the Luxembourg Palace and she asked me to go into the guest bathroom by the front doors. I went reluctantly - as it seemed an odd request - looked around, said to myself..."so it's a nice shade of blue..." and did an immense double-take when I realized seconds later that the walls and the ceiling were of solid Lapis Lazuli! Saõ also threw a lunch for me as I was passing through Paris on my way to Russia for the first time-and invited "White Russian" friends of the most rarefied kind-incredibly thoughtful of her... 

What is the next jewellery project you are working on?  

Surviving the pandemic - and Donald Trump. As I survived extensive brain-surgery in 2008, perhaps I will...

Carved Pink Tourmaline and Green Peridot Snails, Carved Yellow Sapphire Leaves, Baroque Pink and Tahitian Drop Pearls Set with Diamonds in 18K Yellow Gold, Maximara

Carved Pink Tourmaline and Green Peridot Snails, Carved Yellow Sapphire Leaves, Baroque Pink and Tahitian Drop Pearls Set with Diamonds in 18K Yellow Gold, Maximara

Golden South Sea Pearls, Yellow Beryl and Diamonds, Set in 18K Yellow Gold, Carlos Holub (Currently living in Houston)

Golden South Sea Pearls, Yellow Beryl and Diamonds, Set in 18K Yellow Gold, Carlos Holub (Currently living in Houston)

What is your personal style? Tailored

As a kid, what were you like? Enthusiastic and curious about everything. (Can't understand the new generations - who aren't...)  My parents also never taught me the meaning of the word "no;" which allowed me to follow their intelligent and cultured suggestions more (and longer...) than most kids would have!

Favorite piece of jewellery to wear?  My platinum ring with a Greek carving of Hercules fighting his lion – I bought the seal in Corfu and set it with a yellow sapphire touching my skin in the back (after several Ayurvedic doctors told me I must); I try to use it to remember that life can be very hard, and sadly am nevertheless surprised when it turns out to be. First version of the Rolex Explorer my mother gave me when I hit 21, now referred to in auction catalogs as an "antique...!"

Favorite vacation spot? Block Island, Paris, Capri, Big Sur, Kauai’s Napali Coast, Mill Reef. Love to swim…

Three words to describe you as a jewellery designer? Traditional marries modern. 

Love to cook or Eat out/Take out? Love to cook WITH friends: Eat out/Take out - but not junk food!

Thank you so much Christopher for taking the time (and having the patience) to answer all my questions! It was a pleasure interviewing you and in the process learning such a lot about jewellery design, gemstones, books, history, and so much more :)

You can find our more about Christopher Walling and his jewellery pieces at www.christopherwallingjewelry.com

You can also follow him on Instagram at @christopher_walling_jewelry

All images used in this post are the property of Christopher Walling Jewelry. Any person or organization not affiliated with Christopher Walling Jewelry may not use, copy, alter or modify any of the images used in this post, without the advance written permission of Christopher Walling Jewelry

[The Culture Of Pearls] CHRISTOPHER WALLING JEWELRY DEBUTS NEW STORE IN THE HEART OF PARK AVENUE

By Reema Farooqui

In this climate of the Covid 19 pandemic, every little piece of good news is relished with delight. One such sparkling news is the opening of a new pop-up store by jewellery designer Christopher Walling.

Located at 485 Park Avenue (at the northeast corner of 58th Street) in Manhattan, Christopher’s new store has four rooms with a very comfortable, parlour-like feel to them. Decorated with an eclectic mix of furniture, people stepping into the store are immediately struck by its calm ambience, a world away from busy Park Avenue outside. Ensconced in the serene interior of the store, clients can be seen chatting with Christopher and planning their next fine jewellery purchase.

I caught up with Christopher and asked him about his new store, the safety protocols he has put in place for his clients and most importantly what fine jewellery treasures his clients can hope to find at his new premises.

Christopher Walling Jewelry, 58th Street and Park Avenue

Christopher Walling Jewelry, 58th Street and Park Avenue

Congratulations on the opening of your new store! What an exciting new chapter for Christopher Walling Jewelry. Could you tell us something about the location of your store and what drew you to this location?

Thank you, Reema! And it IS very exciting: not only was it occupied for 64 years by the iconic jewelers Seaman Schepps, not only is it a beautiful store in a perfect location (Park Avenue and 58th Street), not only is it my first free-standing store in NYC – in 49 years – but…it was OFFERED to me “out of the blue!” (I was in free-standing stores in Aspen for 24 years – two of which were my own.)

Carved Turquoise and Freshwater Baroque Pearl Necklace with Ridged Signature CW Clasp in 18K Yellow Gold

Carved Turquoise and Freshwater Baroque Pearl Necklace with Ridged Signature CW Clasp in 18K Yellow Gold

In this time of the Covid 19 pandemic, what steps and protocols have you instituted to ensure the health and safety of your clients?

No one without a mask will be allowed in. We have four rooms so that – should more than one client at a time arrive – we can all not only social-distance but also have privacy. We offer gloves (and masks) and every room has hand disinfectant…and we have a small window in the back of the store which we keep open, ensuring excellent circulation.

Ridged Havemeyer Earrings with Diamonds in 18K Yellow Gold; Ridged Logic with Coral Branches in 18K Yellow Gold

Ridged Havemeyer Earrings with Diamonds in 18K Yellow Gold; Ridged Logic with Coral Branches in 18K Yellow Gold

Do your clients need to have a prior appointment to meet with you or is this a walk in store as well?

Both! Walk in clients are welcome and we are always ready to accommodate anyone who wants to set an appointment with us. And as happened when I opened my Fifth Avenue showroom in 1990, I know that friends and clients will want to “break the ice” to celebrate its opening and to support an American artist by acquiring a new CW jewel for their collections! 

Earrings with South Sea Baroque Pearls, Old-Mine Cut Diamond Briolettes (6 carats total weight) and Emerald Drops (75 carats total weight), Set in 18K White Gold

Earrings with South Sea Baroque Pearls, Old-Mine Cut Diamond Briolettes (6 carats total weight) and Emerald Drops (75 carats total weight), Set in 18K White Gold

What can your clients hope to find among the jewellery offerings at the store?

As you know, Reema, I have shown in museums from Honolulu to Istanbul, am included in 17 books on jewelry, have been featured in two PBS documentaries, have been to as many museums which have jewels around the world as possible  and describe my work as a marriage of tradition & modern. So this store showcases my signature pieces…which derive from all those experiences and, of course, include many and varied pearls – given my life-long love of pearls. I am also creating variations on my themes, like any good “musician;” my life-long interest in color; and work in metals and gems I’ve not used before (or occasionally not even known of until recently) which are equally a “nod” to the mores as well as the economics of our pandemic era. Including silver…and magnetite!

A 46 ct. Tanzanite and Two Baroque South Sea Pearls ; Tahitian Pearl, South Sea Pearl and Diamond Earrings

A 46 ct. Tanzanite and Two Baroque South Sea Pearls ; Tahitian Pearl, South Sea Pearl and Diamond Earrings

Apart from finished jewellery pieces, do you also offer bespoke services at your new store? If so, how does that work?

Of course! A good example is the 46 ct. tanzanite – as well as the two huge South Sea Pearls – I recently posted on both Instagram and Facebook, with the suggestion that someone who falls in love with them come in and design a jewel WITH me, around them! Having grown up in New England more than anywhere else, I have also always loved the concept of “re-cycling:” of clients bringing me their own stones for re-setting. To my clients’ surprise – sometimes – I won’t, however, take apart a lovely piece by an important designer but will suggest incorporating the entire jewel in a new one…and in such a way that the original jewel can be later removed, intact.

Carved Chrysoprase Necklace with 18K Yellow Gold and Diamond Clasp

Carved Chrysoprase Necklace with 18K Yellow Gold and Diamond Clasp

I love the décor of your store. The colours are warm and inviting and the furniture is very “you.” Would you like to tell us something about the beautiful furniture you chose for the store and why it spoke to you as a jewellery designer? 

Thanks again. The light beige suede-covered walls (with a subtle pattern) I found already in the store, totally lent themselves to all the “brown” furnishings I have. My father admired the great furniture artist, George Nakashima, beyond words and instilled that respect and admiration in me. In fact, we made a pilgrimage together to Nakashima’s workshop outside New Hope, Pennsylvania, in 1968. Over the years I’ve collected what works of his I could – which includes a truly sensational and unusual desk, and which is in effect, the centerpiece of the store’s design! I also like Biedermeier furniture and bought a beautiful suite when I opened my wonderful showroom on Fifth Avenue in 1990, which is still open, by the way. I commissioned the rising art-world star, Randy Polumbo, to build it (his very first commission) as well as eight Grecian-temple-like standing cases of dark red mahogany…all of which flowed together to create an instant store for me now. And one, quite frankly, which feels nurturing and like a home to me! For a three-month “pop-up!”

So, if you are in New York City and are looking to buy fine jewellery for yourself or for a loved one this Holiday Season or even into the New Year, head over to Christopher Walling’s new store on Park Avenue. Not only will you find exquisite jewellery pieces to swoon over, you’ll also get an opportunity to admire, in real life, some mesmerizing pieces of original Nakashima furniture.

Christopher Walling Jewelry, 485 Park Avenue at 58th Street (North East Corner), Manhattan, New York City, New York. Monday-Friday 11am -5 pm, Saturday 11am-5 pm. Phone: 917-261-4637

You may also be interested in finding out more about Christopher Walling in my conversation with him about his jewellery journey, his jewellery creation process and some of his most iconic jewellery designs.

You can follow Christopher Walling Jewelry on Instagram at @christopher_walling_jewelry

Featured Image: Baroque Pearl and Tanzanite Necklace, Christopher Walling Jewelry

All images used in this post are the property of Christopher Walling Jewelry. Any person or organization not affiliated with Christopher Walling Jewelry may not use, copy, alter or modify any of the images used in this post, without the advance written permission of Christopher Walling Jewelry


Don’t know if it’s due to the pandemic but an old, old friend with whom I’d regretfully lost touch asked a mutual friend - the brilliant jewelry designer Rebecca Koven - if she knew me & then asked for my number & called me! An English beauty with an incredible sense of humor & style and with a Greek husband - both terrific - she was and is a great jewelry connoisseur and collector. Ditto paintings! We used to see each each regularly in Venice, London, Athens and New York. We met at a party uptown 40 years ago, her long black hair was loose and flowing AND…she was wearing a staggering brooch by MME. BELPERRON by whom - as some of you know - I believe I am the only living American jewelry designer who had the honor to be befriended. More about THAT in another blog. Two nights later i was at one of the outstanding painter Nabil Nahas’ exquisite dinners in his Tribeca loft - decorated partly with a large suite of guilded chairs made by Jacob Desmalter for Napoleon - for the Chateau of Fointainbleau. i was talking with a couple i’d never met and whose name I hadn’t caught when i let my eyes wander from the lady’s face to her jewelry…and there was the Belperron brooch. I couldn’t help myself and exclaimed: “Oh, it’s YOU, Pauline!” Now i will tell you what PROSOPAGNOSIA is. Say WHAT? Years later i learned why I was not recognizing women I knew, sometimes, at an Aspen Brain Seminar which I attend yearly - having had brain surgery in 2008, myself, makes this incisive event all the more intriguing to me. A gorgeous brain surgeon from Mt. Sinai Hospital - very pregnant spoke, limmediately followed by her white, rapper, gorgeous husband made up a rap based on her talk AND i got to ask why - when women changed their hairstyles - i often no longer knew who they were. The answer - you guessed it - is Prosopagnosia and it is an actual physical phenomenon: some of us need the hair framing a face to recognize the person we know! and Pauline’s hair had been very tightly pulled back against her head…the second night. go figure! (i’ll allow myself a tangent before i forget this related story. Three decades ago I noticed that an upcoming Christie’s London sale had a jewel BY Mme. Belperron, which…they hadn’t realized was by her. Sure that the price would go through the ceiling - as it should have - i nevertheless arranged to bid by phone. Lo and behold the hammer went down at $2,500 (ludicrously) and it was…mine! go figure. later that afternoon I was surprised to receive a call from Christie’s saying apologetically that one of their favorite Belperron collectors had been stuck in London traffic and would like me to sell the brooch to him. i asked how much he was offering. The flustered answer was: “well, $2,500 of course” I politely allowed that if their friend would like “to add a zero to that figure, I would be glad to sell it.” he did not!)

Christopher Walling
International Women's Day, plus!

I had the pleasure and honor to hear Lori Harrison Kahane and Joan Michelson speak about the early & groundbreaking journalist Miriam Michelson - followed by a lunch at Brooke Kroeger’s - four amazing women!

And to read the guests a three-page (!) letter Margaret Sanger had written my grandmother - Anna Strunsky Walling - the very afternoon after Dr. Sanger was sentenced to ten years in jail & on hearing which I would defy a stone not to WEEP… (the original letter is in Yale’s Sterling Library’s collection of my grandmother’s papers)

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Christopher Walling
Rosalind English Walling

In case anyone thought I might not have come by my love of jewelry “honestly,” I’m willing to bet my great-grandmother’s love of it @ 1890 disproves that premise…I love the diamond flowers in her hair a=& her earrings prove she - like me - loved pearls. An heiress & where the hell are those jewels, now?!?!

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Mitzura Salgian
Antique Jewelry & Art Conference

Jewelry Camp @ the Newark Museum
July 26th - 27th, 2019

From professional colleagues to entrepreneurs, industry veterans, art historians and jewelry enthusiasts – all of our attendees are looking to learn and stay on top of the industry.

List of Speakers

Christopher Walling

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“Mystique of the Pearl” and the Nature special “Diamonds.” Mr. Walling’s stunning designs have significantly influenced modern jewelry, especially in the first major use since the Renaissance of unusually shaped and rare baroque pearls, aside from Arthur King – as well as in his palette of solid colors. His creations have adorned such notables in society and the arts as the Maya Angelou, the Lily Auchincloss, Linda Gray, Brook Hayward, Jasper Johns, Alex Katz, Queen Noor of Jordan, the late and great Parisian hostess Sao Schlumberger, Danielle Steele, Renee Taylor, Elizabeth Taylor and Kathleen Turner. Mr. Walling uses every variety of gem in his work – often in shades with which we have not associated them, previously – if not also of gems themselves which have not even been mined before.

Descended from a notable line of activists, public servants and philanthropists, Christopher Walling is, in addition to his jewelry designing talents, “an erudite and thoroughly charming raconteur who leaves audiences enthralled.” Christopher has exhibited in museums from across America (in Honolulu alone more than a dozen times!) and private art-foundations in Istanbul (twice). His work is included in more than fifteen books about jewels and he has had a spectacular Abalone pearl named after him which was exhibited at the Smithsonian in Washington D.C. in the same gallery as the Hope Diamond. The American Museum Natural History (New York City) included numerous pieces by him in three of their exhibits (“Pearls!” “Diamonds!” and “Gold!”) which traveled around the world for up to six years. he has also lectured at Sotheby’s – among other venues. He did not go to art school but studied political science AND started making jewelry when he was eight years old.

Christopher Walling