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Rare Margot de Taxco Sterling Silver Enamel "Snake" Necklace/Belt
third quarter 20th century, Taxco, Mexico, in the form of a serpent biting its tail, decorated with translucent lavender champleve and opaque pink cloisonne enamel scales, with three detachable segments permitting it to be worn at various lengths, including as a belt. length 21" to 32" (three detachable links, l. 7-1/4", 2-1/2" and 1-1/4"), total weight 238.9 grams

Notes: When recently-divorced beauty shop owner Margot Van Voorhies Carr moved to Mexico in 1937, it was the deliberate beginning of a new chapter of her already event-filled life. She was born in San Francisco in 1896 as Margot Durand, the daughter of adjuster Albert A. Durand and Canadinan immigrant Albina Chabot Durand. Her father died in 1903, leaving her mother to raise her only child (Margot’s brother George having died in infancy in 1899). They survived the great earthquake in 1906, but even this catastrophe may have been less shocking than the discovery that Albert A. Durand had been living under an assumed identity, and that he was actually a member of the prominent Van Voorhies family of New Orleans. Albina and Margo assumed that surname after this discovery. Margot married Albert J. Buneman in 1921 and Evans F. Carr in 1927; both ended in divorce. In 1931, Margot was dealt yet another devasting blow when her mother Albina was brutally murdered in the grocery store she ran.

It was thus that Margot moved to Mexico, eventually settling Taxco, where she met and married Antonio Castillo, a silver smith at the famed workshop of William Spratling. Margot, a talented artist, created designs for him and the two opened their own shop, Los Castillos, in 1939. Margot’s designs were very popular in the United States, which clamored for the relatively inexpensive luxury goods available from Mexico during World War II.

Her marriage to Castillo ended in divorce, too, in 1946. Margot established her own shop under the name Margot de Taxco and hired excellent silversmiths, including Miguel Arias, Geronimo Fuentes, Hilario Lopez, Jaime Quiroz, Miguel Melendez and Melecio Rodgiguez to execute her innovative designs. Despite the efforts of her jealous ex-husband to have her deported, she persevered, and by the 1950s her jewelry was a favorite in United States, particularly in California among the Hollywood elite. She was noted for her use of beautifully shaded enamels and bold, naturalistic designs. After two decades of fantastic success (and a brief fourth marriage to Alberto Cuevas), a series of unfortunate setbacks forced her to close her shop in 1974. She died in Taxco on July 26, 1985.

third quarter 20th century, Taxco, Mexico, in the form of a serpent biting its tail, decorated with translucent lavender champleve and opaque pink cloisonne enamel scales, with three detachable segments permitting it to be worn at various lengths, including as a belt.
length 21" to 32" (three detachable links, l. 7-1/4", 2-1/2" and 1-1/4"), total weight 238.9 grams

  • Notes: When recently-divorced beauty shop owner Margot Van Voorhies Carr moved to Mexico in 1937, it was the deliberate beginning of a new chapter of her already event-filled life. She was born in San Francisco in 1896 as Margot Durand, the daughter of adjuster Albert A. Durand and Canadinan immigrant Albina Chabot Durand. Her father died in 1903, leaving her mother to raise her only child (Margot’s brother George having died in infancy in 1899). They survived the great earthquake in 1906, but even this catastrophe may have been less shocking than the discovery that Albert A. Durand had been living under an assumed identity, and that he was actually a member of the prominent Van Voorhies family of New Orleans. Albina and Margo assumed that surname after this discovery. Margot married Albert J. Buneman in 1921 and Evans F. Carr in 1927; both ended in divorce. In 1931, Margot was dealt yet another devasting blow when her mother Albina was brutally murdered in the grocery store she ran.

    It was thus that Margot moved to Mexico, eventually settling Taxco, where she met and married Antonio Castillo, a silver smith at the famed workshop of William Spratling. Margot, a talented artist, created designs for him and the two opened their own shop, Los Castillos, in 1939. Margot’s designs were very popular in the United States, which clamored for the relatively inexpensive luxury goods available from Mexico during World War II.

    Her marriage to Castillo ended in divorce, too, in 1946. Margot established her own shop under the name Margot de Taxco and hired excellent silversmiths, including Miguel Arias, Geronimo Fuentes, Hilario Lopez, Jaime Quiroz, Miguel Melendez and Melecio Rodgiguez to execute her innovative designs. Despite the efforts of her jealous ex-husband to have her deported, she persevered, and by the 1950s her jewelry was a favorite in United States, particularly in California among the Hollywood elite. She was noted for her use of beautifully shaded enamels and bold, naturalistic designs. After two decades of fantastic success (and a brief fourth marriage to Alberto Cuevas), a series of unfortunate setbacks forced her to close her shop in 1974. She died in Taxco on July 26, 1985.

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December 4, 2021 11:00 AM CST
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