
This auction has ended. View lot details
You may also be interested in
Rose Quartz Cockatoo on Black Tourmaline Base by Peter Muller
Sold for US$3,187.50 inc. premium
Looking for a similar item?
Our Lapidary Works of Art specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.
Find your local specialistAsk about this lot


Client Services (San Francisco)

Client Services (Los Angeles)
Rose Quartz Cockatoo on Black Tourmaline Base by Peter Muller
Carved from a single specimen of rose quartz with good translucency, having inset wings and tail, the comb of yellow jasper, the beak carved of rubellite tourmaline, with tourmaline cabochon eyes, with gold vermeil feet resting atop a black tourmaline crystal on a matrix of cleavelandite with muscovite, raised on a clear acrylic base. Measuring 9 x 7 x 7 in
Footnotes
Peter Muller
Peter Muller was born in 1952 near Lucerne, Switzerland. Following professional training in international banking he commenced a brilliant career in that field only to later be lured by the appeal of international travel—which lead him to live in Brazil in 1979. A chance encounter with a Brazilian carver of birds in 1984 inspired him to change his life's work. He established a workshop in semi-precious stone carvings that same year. His works are rich in unexpected beauty and surprising details. Naturally, no two carvings are identical. They are life-like reproductions of birds from the tropics and the Northern Hemisphere, hand-fabricated from natural colored precious stones from all over the world. The bases are hand-picked by Peter from several tons of rough, including Brazilian tourmalines and quartzes from eleven different mines, as well as many other rare minerals from his adopted country. Familiar with the work of Idar-Oberstein carvers since his childhood, Peter has made annual trips there over the last thirty years to learn new carving techniques. These skills are then imparted to his crew of carvers in Brazil, now considered to be the best trained craftsmen in that country. Peter Müller's lapidary work has been the subject of a number of articles including: Rock and Gem Magazine, May 2000 and Wildlife Art Magazine, March/April 2002.

