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Inside the Tiny Spanish Village That Elsa Peretti Called Home—And Tiffany’s New Pieces Paying Tribute to Her

In 1972, the designer Elsa Peretti bought a modest cottage she had seen in Spain for a few thousand dollars—all she could afford at the time. Since then, her fortunes grew and grew, and now to celebrate her legacy with Tiffany & Co.—a match made 50 years ago—the iconic jewelry and design house has launched three new pieces in her memory: A Bone ring, a Split ring, and a Bone cuff in 18-karat gold set with a teardrop of pavé diamonds. Organic and sensual, they are as relevant now as they were a half century ago, and they transport us to the village of Sant Martí Vell, in Spain’s Catalonia region, where Elsa discovered that house. It was passionate adoration from the moment she first saw the Casa Pequeña, cradled by roses and wisteria, on a starry night. The cottage, part of a ruinous village halfway up a hill, would become both a sanctuary and a place of inspiration.

Elsa’s father, Ferdinando, was as rich as Croesus but, scandalized by his daughter turning her back on the family’s prim, conservative ways, left her to make a living for herself. Elsa taught French and worked as a ski instructor in Gstaad before she took a degree in interior design and worked in Milan for the architect Dado Torrigiani. In 1964, she became a fashion model, working in Barcelona and hanging out with a group of Catalan creatives—the architect Ricardo Bofill and the sculptor Xavier Corberó among them—who were against Franco and his fascist regime and known as la Gauche Divine (the divine left).

In 1968, Elsa moved to New York, and her career soared. In addition to modeling, she began experimenting with jewelry, continued to work with a Spanish silversmith, Vincent Abad, and created a pendant piece on a long leather thong, inspired by a bud vase she had found in a flea market. The piece was worn by one of the models in a show by Giorgio di Sant’Angelo—the designer whose work was then the quintessence of haute hippie—and was an instant success. Her modeling career also proved to be a catalyst: Later that year she returned from an assignment in Mexico with an element of a horse’s saddle that, reworked in silver, would make an effective belt; and in the early ’70s she became one of the so-called Halstonettes, the cabine of the famed designer Halston. She soon began designing jewelry for him—sensual pieces that captured the spirit of the age: a small free-form bottle in lacquer on a long, beautifully made knotted silk thread, for instance.

And then, in 1974, Tiffany came calling, and she brought all her inspirations into play: In Sant Martí Vell, she saw a snake’s skeleton and transformed it into a necklace; scorpions soon followed. Her creativity seemed boundless—​taking form as hearts, buckles, beans (a lighter, a cuff link, an evening purse), bones, apples, mesh—and the impact of her jewelry was remarkable: Decades later, her work would influence designers like Tom Ford. Even the mere attitude with which she wore the belt pieces, created in the ’60s and ’70s, went far beyond their time.

The many buildings she preserved at Sant Martí Vell include her laboratory, which is filled with an embarrassment of her sketches, and what is now an installation of her work alongside the ravishing pieces that she collected—antique Chinese bowls of delicately colored iced celadon amongst them.

Elsa eventually came to call a host of other properties home—in Manhattan (cool and white, with rattan on the floor), and in Italy (put together with her great friend Renzo Mongiardino); there was a house on the Porto Ercole coastline that featured a fireplace in the form of a furious, fantastical man belching flames, and an antiqued trompe l’oeil that seemed to open to the skies, with branches nodding at the cracks; and an apartment in Rome that conjured up Mongiardino’s more imperial tastes. Sant Martí Vell, however, remained closest to her heart. With the wealth that her work with Tiffany & Co. brought her (in 2013, the house renewed their exclusive contract, with Elsa receiving royalties and a lump sum of $47 million), her interest in the village was amplified.

There are now 18 Elsa houses, and three masias, or country homes, all heritage sites for the Nando and Elsa Peretti Foundation. Her original house remains modest, its additions costly but subtle: There is a pool discreetly hidden on a lower terrace, and sculptures are dotted throughout the gardens; in the dining area, Elsa designed a raised fireplace, and in these spaces, her astonishing works of art are now gathered. (In a separate tower, Elsa constructed a bathroom—you take your life in your hands to climb the steps to it, but the view is a pretty one.) As she acquired more and more houses, Elsa’s vision grew. A long stone building that once housed the local tax authority has had its floors ripped out and a striking copper fireplace by Lanfranco Bombelli, which climbs through three floors, put in. (A huge millstone has been placed at the bottom—a “table” for entertaining and a clarion call for the parties once held here.) When Elsa bought a farmhouse on the other side of her vineyards, the old farmer who sold it was devastated to be leaving; Elsa had him stay on, and they lived in the house together. (Peretti passed away in 2021, at the age of 80.)

A gnarled, blackened staircase, a thing of absolute beauty, rises to a bedroom. In one corner is her Padova cutlery set, pinned to the wall. The flask for the water is like a silvered vessel with an opening for your hand. The sinuous silver candlesticks, abstracted from cow bones, hold candles reaching up to the sky. Elsa’s world is a potent one.

©All rights reserved Adrianna Glaviano

Hamish Bowles
August 5, 2024