Circa 1930 Copper and Pewter Tray [SOLD]

C3913Q-tray.jpg

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Serge Nekrassoff (1895 - 1985)
  • Category: Other Items
  • Origin: Western Artists
  • Medium: copper, pewter
  • Size: 6-7/8” diameter
  • Item # C3913Q
  • SOLD

Pewter detailing.This copper and pewter tray was made by Serge Nekrassoff in the early 1930s, a time when pewter was readily available.  It is stamped with his name on the underside.  He worked mainly in pewter until it became scarce in the 1930s, as explained below.  He then worked in copper and pewter combined.

“Serge Nekrassoff (pronounced Ne-KRAS-ov) was born in Russia, February 10, 1895. By the early 1900s, he was serving in the Russian Imperial Guard. He was fluent in many languages, including Russian, German, French, and English. By the time of the Russian Revolution (1917), Serge was forced to flee westward.

“He stopped first in Germany and for 18 months worked as a coal miner. He soon left and went to France in 1919. He first earned a living as a taxi driver in Paris. At the same time, he began learning the art of metal-smithing in copper and by 1920 was beginning to sell his pieces in Paris. Around 1923, he travelled to Argentina, and remained there for 18 months, continuing to make and sell his copper pieces.

“He had gained his passport and visa to travel to America, and was living in Philadelphia by October 1925. Within the next month, he was living in New York City and had set up his first studio and shop on14th Street. This was when he was working exclusively in pewter: all of the pieces at this time were marked 'Nekras PEWTER'. In New York Serge met his future wife, Russian emigre Mary Leslie, who had been previously married with a son, Boris. Serge and Mary were married in 1928 and Serge adopted Boris.

Pewter detailing.“By 1931, Serge had moved to Darien, Connecticut, and by 1937, a shop and studio had been built. Most pieces made at this time were still pewter, but some copper and copper/pewter combination pieces were being made at this time. It was in this period that the shop employed 18 craftsmen, the most to work for Nekrassoff at any one time. The finished pewter pieces, at the height of the Depression, were being sold to markets in Canada, South Africa, London, and throughout the US.

“Unfortunately, by the late 1930s pewter was becoming harder to make as tin was becoming scarce, due to the Japanese aggression in Asia. Most of the tin mines at that time operated in the Far East, and the Japanese stopped the export of tin from these areas just before the opening of World War II. The cost of making pewter under these conditions in the States became too costly and the shop closed at the beginning of the war. Another effect of the war was that many of the pieces Nekrassoff made may well have fallen victim of the metal drives in the US, hence the scarcity of the earlier pieces. Boris Nekrassoff, Serge's son, enlisted in the Army and fought during the war as a paratrooper. With the close of the shop in Connecticut, Serge moved his family to Florida, and for the duration of the war, he supported himself as a photographer.

“By 1946, the Nekrassoff family moved back to Darien, Connecticut, to reopen the shop. Pewter was too expensive after the war, equivalent in price to sterling silver, so it was decided to concentrate on copper and enameled pieces. In 1949, the Darien, Connecticut, city directory lists 'Serge S. Nekrassoff', his wife, 'Mary L. Nekrassoff' and their son, 'Boris S. Nekrassoff' having a business listed as 'antiques' at 164 Old King's Highway (Post Rd.), Darien. Boris is listed as 'clerk' in this directory.  The shop moved to Stuart, Florida, in 1952, and remained there until 1982. It was known as 'Nekrassoff and Son' in its Florida years.

“By 1979, Serge Nekrassoff retired at age 86, with Boris continuing the shop. Boris retired in 1982, and the shop officially closed at that time. Serge Nekrassoff continued to be active in retirement, travelling often back to Europe. Boris' description of his father is one of a man passionate for the arts, travelling to museums and historic sites in Europe. Serge Nekrassoff died in Florida at the age of 90, in December 1985.”

[This biographical sketch was provided by Boris Nekrassoff, son of Serge, in a phone conversation with the author in September 2000.] Biography of Serge S. and Boris S. Nekrassoff © Kellscraft Studio and Jeffrey Kelley, 2000, revised in 2006.


Condition: this Circa 1930 Copper and Pewter Tray is very good condition

Provenance: from the collection of a former resident of Albuquerque, now passed away

Alternate view of this copper tray.

 

Serge Nekrassoff (1895 - 1985)
  • Category: Other Items
  • Origin: Western Artists
  • Medium: copper, pewter
  • Size: 6-7/8” diameter
  • Item # C3913Q
  • SOLD

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