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WMF Art Nouveau Aperitif Serving Tray

$771.28
£572.48
€650
CA$1,070.13
A$1,198.98
CHF 623.52
MX$14,526.53
NOK 7,943.94
SEK 7,415.94
DKK 4,949.16

About the Item

Art Nouveau aperitif server or pin tray, circa 1900. Silver-plated metal with ginkgo biloba leaf decoration, handle decorated with a woman. Stamped WMF. In very good condition. Total height: 9.5 cm Width: 31.5 cm Depth: 17 cm Weight: 700 g WMF was originally called Metallwarenfabrik Straub & Schweizer. In 1880, Metallwarenfabrik Straub & Schweizer merged with another German company and took the name Württembergische Metallwarenfabrik. WMF then acquired the Polish metalworks Plewkiewicz in Warsaw in 1886, which became a subsidiary of WMF around 1900. In 1900, WMF acquired Albert Köhler, a renowned Austrian ironworks company. Then, in 1905, WMF acquired Orivit, a company known for its Jugendstil (German equivalent of Art Nouveau) pewter products, followed a year later by the purchase of Kunstgewerbliche Metallwarenfabrik Orion, another German metal fabrication company. During World War I, WMF was responsible for producing weapons for the German army and had certified to the Allied Control Commission that the tools used to produce these weapons had been destroyed. However, following Hitler's call for rearmament, the company, then under the control of Hugo Debach, immediately resumed arms production. Debach died shortly afterward. From 1940 onward, WMF began increasingly using forced labor from Soviet prisoners of war in surrounding camps, who eventually comprised a third of the company's workforce. WMF also founded its own concentration camp in 1944 to detain and force over 900 Hungarian Jewish women to work for it. In May 2016, Groupe SEB announced the acquisition of WMF, then active in small household appliances but primarily specializing in coffee machines, for €1.02 billion excluding debt assumption and €1.6 billion including debt.

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