® Harald Gottschalk
Cartier Panthère, a new release from luxury publisher Assouline, looks back at Cartier's iconic use of the panther in its jewelery, accessories and objects d'art. This ring is made from white gold, emeralds and onyx, and features 545 diamonds.

According to Pierre Rainero, Cartier's Image, Style and Heritage director, figurative pieces like this were typically associated with actresses and prostitutes before the 1940's.
Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images
Wallis Simpson, the Duchess of Windsor, was one of the early proponents of Cartier's panther motif. Her collection included this 1952 bracelet, which sold for £4.5 million ($7 million) at a Sotheby's auction in 2010.
V. Wulveryck, Collection Cartier © Cartier
This 1949 brooch made of platinum, white gold, diamonds, and an impressive Kashmir sapphire was the second three-dimensional panther piece that Cartier made for the Duchess of Windsor. (The first was mounted on an emerald.)
® Harald Gottschalk
This medallion, made last year, is rendered in white gold, diamonds, emeralds, and onyx.
Cartier Archives © Cartier
This watercolor by famed French fashion illustrator George Barbier was run as a Cartier magazine ad throughout the 1920's.
® Cartier
A preparatory sketch for a panther jewel.
® Cartier
A panther necklace of platinum, diamonds, fine pearls, sapphires, black jade, onyx, and yellow beryl.
® V. Wulveryck
A watch-cuff bracelet made from white gold and set with 937 brilliant-cut diamonds, two emeralds, and onyx in 2013.
Cartier Archives © Cartier
A two-headed gold bangle from the early 90s.
© Periὀdico Excélsior
Mexican actress María Félix seen here wearing a custom two-headed Cartier panther bangle in 1967.
© Cartier
A model wears a panther headband fashioned from two panther brooches and a triple diamond line in this photo from 1967.
CNN  — 

There’s something about the panther that seems to exude luxury. Perhaps it’s the way they move. The elusive feline somehow suggests confidence and desirability at once.

Since 1914, the French jewelery brand Cartier has transferred the panther’s shape and assumed glamor onto intricate pieces, jewels, accessories and objets. A brooch, a pendant, a ring, a watch face – over the last hundred years, the Cartier panther has become one of the most recognizable symbols in the history of fine jewelery.

“The panther is a permanent source of inspiration throughout all of our different categories of objects,” says Pierre Rainero, Cartier’s Image, Style and Heritage director. “It goes beyond the physical expression because, in fact, the panther has become very much associated with the personality of the maison as a whole.”

Cartier’s big cat connection has recently been traced in Cartier Panthère, a weighty tome from luxury publisher Assouline released in honor of the motif’s centenary. But while he’s happy to pay tribute to the past, Rainero, who oversees all contemporary design, is less interested in preserving the panther’s legacy than he is in furthering it.

® Harald Gottschalk
Panthers in progress. Setting onyx for a panther-themed diamond necklace.

Rather than leaning on past designs for guidance, Rainero says the firm’s designers – who produce new works each year both for collections and as unique custom orders – channel the personality the Cartier panther represents in terms of “audacity, uniqueness, strength and symbolism, and exquisite craftsmanship.”

“We can play with the culture of the Cartier panther,” he says. “It’s an open door to many different variations and iterations.”

The big cat in context

One of the earliest panther pieces – an onyx vanity case embellished with a diamond-and-onyx panther between two cypress trees – was created for Jeanne Toussaint, a designer friend of Coco Chanel who had captivated founder Louis Cartier with her wit, charm and determination.

© Robert Doisneau, Rapho
The Duchess of Windsor Wallis Simpson was an early fan of the Cartier panther.

Toussaint would go on to serve as Cartier’s artistic director of jewelry from 1933 until 1970. Under her leadership, the panther’s established connotations were transposed to symbolize women’s post-war freedom as they gradually acquired more rights, asserted themselves in the work force, and shook free of strict social dictates.

“The animal appears like an emblem of that freedom in a very elegant way, very much appropriate to be illustrated in jewelry,” Rainero says. “That’s why it was so successful, and why it was so strong: You have the woman’s attitude, but then you also have the attitude of the animal.”

Courtesy Assouline
Cartier Panthère, published by Assouline.

Like most fashions, the panther is as much a reflection of the times as it is a reflection of the brand. In the last hundred years, Cartier has moved from primarily abstract Art Deco styling in the early 20th century, to ornate three-dimensional panther pieces worn by the Duchess of Windsor Wallis Simpson in the 1940s (before that, figurative jewelry was tacitly reserved for actresses and prostitutes), to the white-gold-platinum-diamond palette meant to complement minimalist grunge of the 1990s.

These days, Rainero says it’s much more difficult to pin down one overarching design aesthetic. Just as fashion designers no longer feel the need to conform to a popular silhouette, jewelry designers – and consumers – have largely stopped adhering to a single style.

There has been a focus on more minimalist pieces to reflect current jewelry trends, sure. But what’s most exciting, he says, is the vast variety of pieces being suggested by designers for collections and custom commissioned pieces alike, ranging from the hyper-realistic and figurative, to the more stylized and masculine.

“One century later, society has evolved considerably, and I think that freedom of behavior has extended to the objects women decide to wear. That’s what we’re cultivating for the future: the uniqueness of expression and treatment,” Rainero says. “There’s a panther for every woman.”