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View full screen - View 1 of Lot 183. An American Silver Jack-in-the-Pulpit Pattern Flatware Service, Peer Smed and Lona P. Schaeffer, Brooklyn, NY, Circa 1930.

🌟Property from the Portland Art Museum, Portland, Oregon, sold to benefit the Museum Acquisition Fund

An American Silver Jack-in-the-Pulpit Pattern Flatware Service, Peer Smed and Lona P. Schaeffer, Brooklyn, NY, Circa 1930

Lot Closed

October 16, 06:56 PM GMT

Estimate

22,000 - 28,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

comprising:

12 dinner knives, unmarked

8 dinner forks

8 lunch knives

8 lunch forks

12 fish forks

12 dessert forks

12 salad forks

12 cocktail forks

28 teaspoons

8 soup spoons

11 butter spreaders

4 salad servers, in two sizes

1 serving fork

1 serving spoon

3 sauce ladles, in sizes

1 cake server

1 sugar spoon

2 tea strainers

2 waste bowls

2 casters

148 pieces

together with 8 butter spreaders and one matching master butter spreader in a variant pattern by Peer Smed and another similar variant butter spreader by Lona P. Schꦐaeffer

total 158 pieces


241 oz 10 dwt excluding dinner and lunch knives

7511.5 g

Bequest of Arlene Schnitzer

Lona Schaeff💮er (1902–1989) was the eldest daughter of Peer Smed and trained in her father's workshop at 176 Johnson Street in Brooklyn, New York. Her style is distinctly redolent of his work, and it is certain that many pieces which bear his mark were wrought by her; their style draws from the weighty, sculptural Danish skonvirke style. She specialized in jewelry and oversize flatware pieces with jack-in-the-pulpit blossoms and calla lilies for ornament. Her pieces were retailed by Shreve, Crump & Low among others. There are less than ten known examples of her hollowware, all softer and with more scalloping and curvature than her father's work. Together, the two made some of the only known Arts & Crafts sterling studio hollowware in the 1930's and 1940's to come out of Brooklyn.