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Initial Ste. Marie 2011 Update

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THE SILVANE COLLECTION


Carles Curto Text: Carles Curto (curator of the Geology Museum, Barcelona ) & Jordi Fabre
Assistance from John S. White (former Smithsonian curator) John S. White

 


The Silvane Collection

In the world of collecting there is always a small group of prestigious collections that is not well known. This is the case with the Silvane collection, which was created over the last 25 years through the efforts of Josep Amigó (1924-2008).

Devoted to his family, he decided to name his collection the Silvane Collection, which is the result of his linking together the names of his two grand-daughters, Silvia and Ana Elena (whose nickname was Anelen).

Sr. Amigó, as we knew him to be, was above all else a collector and while over the years he had many collections, including trains, stamps, coins, etc, he always said that minerals were the most important, so in the end he only collected minerals. He always said that he could find new details, each unforgettable, every time he looked at a specimen, and that was something that did not occur in any of his other collections.

Years ago he built a collection of good quality minerals but then he got rid of them, as they did not fulfill his desire for systematic variety nor represent his good taste. Then, in the mid 70s and start of the 80s, large finds were made in the Kalahari, Touissit and India that produced an excellent chance to obtain new species. At the same time the views about mineral collections modernized from the point of view of their patrimony, preservation and the presentation of material. With all of this the mineral collecting bug within Sr. Amigó was reawakened. His meeting with Jordi during the Expominer Mineral Show of 1985 and the purchase of a blue Barite from the Moscona mine further animated him. From then on he was a faithful visitor to Jordi's stockroom every time that Jordi came back from a trip or show, which enabled him to pick the material he liked most. This chance to choose, along with the arrival of excellent material from Russia, Afghanistan, Pakistan and, more recently, China, just reinforced and confirmed his passion.

Given time, discretion and good taste, the Silvane collection grew until it contained more than 700 specimens, some of which are exceptional but all of which were selected with the best taste and clear criteria. Sr. Amigó never bragged about his great knowledge, but he always applied a clear principal in what he selected: apart from liking it and its aesthetics the specimen had to connect with him. So it was this mixture of intuition and good taste that came together to create this excellent collection, which is far better than the average Spanish collection.

I especially recall the meetings we used to have in Jordi's stockroom during which Sr. Amigó would tell us the 'whys', both for what he selected and what he rejected, all with his caustic but fine sense of humor. These meetings often ended in front of a table that was well laid out with great dishes and good wines. For him (and also for me) it was the corollary of a perfect mineral session. Along with these meetings I recall with great satisfaction the frequent visits to his house during which, apart from detailed discussions about minerals and mineralogy, we had the chance to touch on a wide range of both divine and human subjects.

So, a precious collection, all of a very high level, with no poor pieces or trash, in which Fluorite and Calcite are very well represented, since he liked them a lot, but which also includes extraordinary specimens of fairly rare material, as he knew when to listen (and weigh) advice. If someone recommended strongly a species that he did not know and he connected with it, then he would end up pleased. Classics from Tsumeb, Morocco, USA, etc, etc, and then modern classics from Russia, China and Pakistan-Afghanistan ennoble the collection, whose balance between esthetics and rareness is very satisfactory.

I am certain that this collection will more than match the wishes of many collectors who will have to (and need to) appreciate each and every one of the specimens within it.

Carles Curto Milà

 

 




Sr. Josep Amigó

Sr. Amigó in our warehouse, in August 2004,
having a good time looking for specimens
for his collection.

Sr. Josep Amigó

(...) but all of which were selected with
the best taste and clear criteria.

Proustite

Willemite   Sulfur   Ludlamite

 

 

Copper

 

Labels from the Silvane Collection

Silvane collection labelSilvane collection label

Chalcocite
Chalcocite. Chalcocite.

AM96S9: Good sample, very representative of the material from the Flambeau Mine, a classic for the species. The crystals, on matrix, are sharp and have very well defined faces and edges, showing the metallic bluing characteristic of the samples from this mine.
Flambeau Mine, Level 1000, Ladysmith, Rusk County, Wisconsin  USA (1994)

Specimen size: 6.3 × 5.4 × 3.8 cm = 2.5” × 2.1” × 1.5”

Main crystal size: 1.1 × 1 cm = 0.4” × 0.4”


Order
Rhodochrosite with Quartz

AN70S9: Transparent and bright sharp rhombohedral crystals. They have an excellent, very deep, color and are on matrix, with Quartz crystals. A desirable specimen, with an excellent balance between all the elements that compose it.
Rob's Pocket, Mini-King Raise, Sweet Home Mine, Alma, Colorado  USA

Specimen size: 4.1 × 3.6 × 2.4 cm = 1.6” × 1.4” × 0.9”

Main crystal size: 1.1 × 0.8 cm = 0.4” × 0.3”


Rhodochrosite with Quartz.
Sold
Pyrargyrite with Calcite and Quartz
Pyrargyrite with Calcite and Quartz. Front
Front
Pyrargyrite with Calcite and Quartz. Side
Side
Pyrargyrite with Calcite and Quartz. Top
Top

AK68S9: Excellent miniature. The Pyrargyrite crystals are elongated, have very well defined faces and edges, have perfect terminations, and are exceptionally bright, being on a Quartz matrix with Calcite.
Fresnillo, Municipio de Fresnillo, Zacatecas  Mexico

Specimen size: 3.1 × 2.1 × 2.9 cm = 1.2” × 0.8” × 1.1”

Main crystal size: 1 × 0.5 cm = 0.4” × 0.2”


Sold
Cinnabar

AA16S9: Very bright rhombohedral crystals of very intense red color, with very well defined faces and edges in some areas, and skeletal and cavernous growths in some other areas. They are on a matrix of quartzite with coatings of microcrystalline Cinnabar.
Pozo de San Teodoro, Almad้n, Ciudad Real  Spain

Specimen size: 5 × 4.6 × 1.2 cm = 2.0” × 1.8” × 0.5”

Main crystal size: 0.8 × 0.5 cm = 0.3” × 0.2”


Cinnabar. Cinnabar.
Sold
Tobermorite
Tobermorite.

AL13S9: Good sample, very representative of this rare calcium silicate, on globular growths of snowy white color on a base of grayish Quartz and on matrix.
Puech de Vermus, Espalion, Aveyron  France (1983)

Specimen size: 4.4 × 3.6 × 4.2 cm = 1.7” × 1.4” × 1.7”

Main crystal size: 0.3 × 0.3 cm = 0.1” × 0.1”

Minor fluorescence long & short UV


Sold
Axinite-(Fe) with Quartz

AM47S9: Very aerial group of transparent sharp crystals. They have a very deep color, are very bright, and they are on Quartz matrix. A Russian classic, increasingly difficult to find.
Puiva, Saranpaul, Tyumenskaya Oblast, Prepolar Ural  Russia

Specimen size: 5.2 × 4.3 × 3.1 cm = 2.0” × 1.7” × 1.2”

Main crystal size: 2.2 × 1.6 cm = 0.9” × 0.6”


Axinite-(Fe) with Quartz. Front
Front
Axinite-(Fe) with Quartz. Top
Top
Sold
Datolite with Quartz
Datolite with Quartz. Front
Front
Datolite with Quartz. Side
Side

AF96S9: Group of doubly terminated crystals, one of them clearly dominant, with very well defined faces and edges, on a group of white crystals of Quartz, a lot of them doubly terminated. The crystals of Datolite, translucent and bright, have the clear green color typical of most of the samples from Dalnjegorsk.
Boron Pit, Dalnjegorsk, Primorskij Kraj  Russia

Specimen size: 7.4 × 4.4 × 4.2 cm = 2.9” × 1.7” × 1.7”

Main crystal size: 4.2 × 3.2 cm = 1.7” × 1.3”


Order
Smithsonite

AM60S9: Spheroidal growths of small crystals that have strongly curved faces and edges. They are slightly pink, very bright and are on botryoidal Goethite and on matrix.
Touissit, Oujda  Morocco

Specimen size: 4.8 × 3.1 × 2.3 cm = 1.9” × 1.2” × 0.9”


Smithsonite.
Sold
Brazilianite on Quartz
Brazilianite on Quartz. Brazilianite on Quartz.

AZ86S9: Two prismatic crystals, one of them clearly dominant, transparent, very bright, lemon yellow colored, with very well defined faces and edges. The matrix, unlike most recent Brazilianite samples from Telirio Mine, is a Quartz crystal.
C๓rrego Frio Mine, Lin๓polis, Divino das Laranjeiras, Doce valley, Minas Gerais  Brazil

Specimen size: 8 × 4.7 × 4.6 cm = 3.1” × 1.9” × 1.8”

Main crystal size: 1.7 × 1.4 cm = 0.7” × 0.6”


Sold
Paravauxite with Sigloite

AB19S9: An excellent sample with thick prismatic crystals of Paravauxite, on matrix, with very well defined faces and edges, of a slightly greenish yellow color and very bright for the species. In some areas on the sample and near to the Paravauxite crystals are growths of thin prismatic crystals of the rare mineral Sigloite, smaller and orange in color.
Mina Siglo XX, Llallagua, Potosํ  Bolivia

Specimen size: 6.3 × 4.2 × 1.4 cm = 2.5” × 1.7” × 0.6”

Main crystal size: 1.1 × 0.4 cm = 0.4” × 0.2”


Paravauxite with Sigloite. Paravauxite with Sigloite.
Sold
Elbaite (Indicolite) with Quartz and Muscovite
Elbaite (Indicolite) with Quartz and Muscovite. Elbaite (Indicolite) with Quartz and Muscovite.

AF87S9: Translucent crystal of very intense and uniform blue color, with a good pinacoidal termination showing a very well marked geometric color zoning, very deep blue on the center of the crystal. On Quartz matrix and with Muscovite.
Gilgit, Gilgit-Baltistan  Pakistan

Specimen size: 4.4 × 2.7 × 3.7 cm = 1.7” × 1.1” × 1.5”

Main crystal size: 3.7 × 0.9 cm = 1.5” × 0.4”


Sold


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