




Pure animal energy upon pure animal power. The bull of this intaglio occupies the bezel with a massive, direct presence — the vigorous body, the head lowered, the muscles taut in a movement that fills the space with primordial authority. Beneath the transparent enamel the ring's 18 kt gilded base draws its animal-print pattern, and this charge meets a ground that speaks the same tongue: ardent and wild, the decoration wraps the band with a rhythm that immediately recognises the subject's vigour. The encounter is natural, instinctive — two forces amplifying each other, doubling the declaration of character. The ring is solid, tangible bronze, the oval bezel holding the bull with the steadiness it demands. This jewel sends back to its wearer a physical, immediate sensation — the bull's vitality passes directly to the one who wears it. Certain details that reveal themselves on closer looking make this feeling plain: there is something divine and something deeply earthbound in him. The cameo colours declare different temperatures of the same force. Light green is a tone that brings legibility and lightness to the whole, drawing out the features with fine balance. Blue, brilliant and deep, paired with the golden crown of the bezel makes for an intriguing, contemporary combination. The vivid orange is intense and solar, igniting the scene without weighing down the finer points. Yellow is pure light, the bull in his most vital expression lit by the Mediterranean sun, its glow reflected on the gilded frame and the lustre of the base. Each time a different intensity. The same power, always surprising — a jewel that knows of earth and substance.
Wichtige Hinweise
The jewels' colors in the photo may look different from the original one. This depends from the resolution. Each object is handmade and has unique characteristics.Embrace your wild strength.
Bacchus was the son of Jupiter, by Semele, daughter of the king of Thebes, in whose city he is said to have been born. He was the god of good-cheer, wine, and hilarity; and of him, as such, the poets have not been sparing in their praises: on all occasions of mirth and jollity, they constantly invoked his presence, and as constantly thanked him for the blessings he bestowed. To him they ascribed the forgetfulness of cares, and the delights of social interaction. He is described as a youth of a plump figure, naked, with a ruddy face, and an effeminate air; he is crowned with ivy and vine leaves, and bears in his hand a thyrsus, or javelin with an iron head, encircled with ivy and vine leaves: his chariot is sometimes drawn by lions, at other times by tigers, leopards, or panthers, and is surrounded by a band of Satyrs, Bacchae, and Nymphs. The women who accompanied him as his priestesses were called Maenads, from their madness; Thyades, from their impetuosity; Bacchae, from their intemperate depravity; and Mimallones, or Mimallonides, from their mimicking their leaders.
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