Rare blue diamond sells for more than $17m
8.01-carat stone fetches eye-watering price in Geneva, as auction house aims for total sales of $100m
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Geneva: A rare blue diamond on Wednesday sold in Geneva for just over
$17 million (Dh62,500,000), as Sotheby’s eyed total sales in excess of
$100 million at the autumn jewel auctions.
The 8.01-carat “Sky
Blue” diamond in a Cartier setting was snapped up for $17.1 million, a
hike of 33 percent on the $12.8 million it sold for in 2012, said the
auction house’s international jewellery division director David Bennett.
Rival
auction house Christie’s opened the season on Tuesday with 167 lots
that sold for $97 million, beating its pre-auction estimate of $80
million.
The “Sky Blue” sale came amid feverish demand for coloured stones.
Sotheby’s
had valued the ring at $15-25 million, well short of the astonishing
$57.54 million Christie’s fetched in May for the 14.62-carat
“Oppenheimer Blue”, which remains the world record.
Tobias
Kormind, head of 77 Diamonds, Europe’s biggest online diamond jewellery
retailer, said interest in coloured stones remained strong.
“Given
the rarity of blue diamonds of this size and quality which have ever
been unearthed, you’d expect every auction of this kind to be a
dogfight,” Kormind said before the auction at the five-star Hotel Beau
Rivage on Lake Geneva.
Rich with history
Sotheby’s, however, failed to sell two other important lots.
The
first was a parure, valued at $3 to $5 million, featuring diamonds once
owned by Russian empress Catherine I. The diamonds were given to her by
her husband, czar Peter the Great, who led Russia until his death in
1725.
In 1711, Catherine was worried that a raging conflict with
the Ottoman Empire posed huge risks to Russia and told her husband to
draft a peace treaty, Sotheby’s said, citing historical records.
Catherine sent the peace proposal and all the jewels she was travelling with to the Ottoman sultan Ahmed III.
The
sultan “accepted these and was obviously delighted, and the truce was
given and the (Russian) empire was saved”, Bennett said earlier.
Also
unsold was a diamond necklace with a detachable clasp owned by empress
Catherine II — Catherine the Great — who ruled Russia from 1762 to 1796,
also valued at up to $5 million.
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