‘Color Vibes’, ‘Color Trip’, ‘Color Flash’—the chapters from Hermès’s new haute bijouterie collection sound uncannily like titles from a Pink Floyd album. And the effects are the same; hypnotic, surreal, and all-absorbing.
Colour is, of course, at the very core of Hermès. The brand’s signature shade of astringent orange has become so deeply steeped in popular consciousness that it’s a love language. The house even has a silk colour library that documents almost 75,000 shades. Yet this latest high-jewellery drop, Les Formes de la Couleur, was the first time in the house’s history that an entire colour wheel of precious stones has been used in haute bijouterie.
Pierre Hardy, creative director of Hermès Jewellery, went back to the drawing board (quite literally) for this new 58-piece collection. Hardy, who studied art in college, applied his knowledge of the theory of colour, exploring the inherent hierarchies and relationships between colour and shape. The resulting line is made up of nine distinct chapters; including ‘Portraits de la couleur’, where geometric shapes mimic digital pixelated art, and ‘Fresh Paint’, which can only be described as freehand painting with coloured stones.
“The aim was to consider how colour is applied to the body, a little like make-up, perhaps,” Hardy explains in a note disseminated as part of the collection. He doesn’t glancingly refer to colour in small swirls, but rather soaks entire pieces in violet, rose, sunset yellow, and blazing orange for a collection that is both strong and enigmatic. “I wanted to make jewellery contemporary and ‘Hermès’ by seeking out as much of the wonder generated by colour as possible,” he says. “The kind of wonder tinged with [the] astonishment we feel when a black and white film is colourised.” J’adore.