
NGV’s Blockbuster Cartier Exhibition Brings Royal Jewels and Rare Timepieces to Melbourne
The Australian-exclusive exhibition features more than 300 Cartier creations, from royal tiaras to Elizabeth Taylor’s legendary ruby necklace.
Few luxury houses have shaped the visual language of glamour quite like Cartier. This winter, Melbourne gets unusually close to the source with Cartier, a major new exhibition opening at the National Gallery of Victoria on June 12.
Direct from London’s Victoria and Albert Museum but expanded for its Australian presentation, the exhibition is being billed as the largest showcase of Cartier ever staged locally, bringing together more than 300 jewels, tiaras, watches, archival drawings and precious objects from across the maison’s history.
That alone would be enough to guarantee queues. But the real intrigue lies in the cast list attached to the objects themselves.

Among the exhibition highlights is the celebrated Scroll Tiara, worn by Clementine Churchill to Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation and later by Rihanna on the cover of W magazine. Elsewhere are jewels owned by Wallis Simpson, Princess Margaret and the Begum Aga Khan III, alongside a 1951 ruby-and-diamond necklace gifted to Elizabeth Taylor by producer Mike Todd during a holiday on the French Riviera. Taylor reportedly described the piece as “like the sun — lit up and made of red fire.”
The exhibition also traces Cartier’s transformation from a Parisian family jeweller into what King Edward VII famously called “the jeweller of kings and the king of jewellers.” Under brothers Louis, Pierre and Jacques Cartier, the house became one of the first truly international luxury brands, cultivating royalty, aristocracy and later Hollywood with equal fluency.

There is, too, a broader cultural point embedded in all this. Jewellery exhibitions are no longer niche museum programming for collectors and historians. They have become a form of luxury tourism — immersive exercises in fantasy, craftsmanship and aspiration. The NGV understands this particularly well, having steadily transformed its Melbourne Winter Masterpieces series into one of the country’s most reliable cultural blockbusters.
Appropriately, the exhibition design itself promises a degree of theatre. Created in collaboration with Dutch studios Studio Sabine Marcelis and CLOUD, the staging will draw heavily on colour, light and materiality — less static retrospective than a fully realised Cartier universe.
For a house built on the art of seduction, anything less would have felt strangely off-brand.

Main image, top: Diamonds and platinum brooch, Cartier London, special order, 1941, commissioned by Ernest Schwaiger.
© Victoria and Albert Museum, London.
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