詳情
The polygonal free-form polished on all sides, the front showing an intense iridescence of blue, yellow, and silvery-green, free-standing.
11 x 10 x 9in. (28 x 26 x 23cm.)
特別通告
Specified lots are being stored at Crozier Park Royal (details below) or will be removed from Christie’s, 8 King Street, London, SW1Y 6QT by 5.00pm on the day of the sale. Christie’s will inform you if the lot has been sent offsite. If the lot has been transferred to Crozier Park Royal, it will be available for collection from 12.00pm on the second business day following the sale. Please call Christie’s Client Service 24 hours in advance to book a collection time at Crozier Park Royal. All collections from Crozier Park Royal will be by pre-booked appointment only. Tel: +44 (0)20 7839 9060 Email: cscollectionsuk@christies.com. If the lot remains at Christie’s, 8 King Street, it will be available for collection on any working day (not weekends) from 9.00am to 5.00pm
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榮譽呈獻
James HyslopHead of Department, Science & Natural History
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拍品專文

Labradorite is a Feldspar mineral boasting a diverse specturm of colour thanks to their varying chemical composition of calcium and sodium. The name derives from where the first specimens were discovered – within the Labrador Peninsula, Canada – but fine examples of this mineral can be found most notably in Madagascar, China, and the United States.
First coined by Ove Balthasar Bøggild in 1924, ‘Labradorescence’ was the reflection of light across multiple directional planes, which cannot be viewed from a single angle nor under a microscope. Whether in free-form, sliced or spherical form, polished Labrodorite under the right light conditions reveals a beautiful array iridescence including blues, yellows, silvers and greens. When a specimen exhibits and richer and even rainbow-coloured iridescence (an even rarer occurrence almost exclusively mined in Finland), the mineral is then classed as a Spectrolite.
The colouration of Labradorite was considered so mesmerising in Native American and Inuit traditions, that it was perceived to be the petrified fire produced by the Northern Lights (aurora borealis). Now known to have gradually formed from crystallised veins of magma, such specimens are still renowned to this day for their free-form shapes and extremely decorative hues.

COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
Bøggild, O.B., ‘On the Labradorization of the Feldspars’, Kongelige Danske Videnskabernes Selskab, Mathematisk-fysiske Meddelelelser, Series 6, Vol.3 (1924), pp.1–79

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