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Object Timeline
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1936 |
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1993 |
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2025 |
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Serving Dish Serving Dish
This is a serving dish. It was designed by Belle Kogan and manufactured by Reed & Barton. It is dated 1936 and we acquired it in 1993. Its medium is silver plated, nickel. It is a part of the Product Design and Decorative Arts department.
Belle Kogan: Designing a Place for Women in the Field of Industrial Design
In the late 1920s, industrial design began to emerge as a viable field in the United States. Because of the Great Depression, there was a great deal of competition among companies who were beginning to rely on visual form as a way to sell products. Men dominated the field until Belle Kogan came on the scene in the late 1920s.
Belle Kogan is credited with being one of the first, prominent female industrial designers. She was born in Russia in 1902 and immigrated to the United States with her parents when she was four years old. She always demonstrated an interest in art, and in high school one of her teachers recommended she take a mechanical drawing course. She was the only woman in the class. After graduation she went on to teach first-year mechanical drawing at the school and said that her knowledge of mechanical drawing was “one of the factors of my ability to provide my clients with exact working drawings.”[i] Kogan realized early on that design was about the process and that designs were constantly developing and evolving. She commented that, “...design didn’t just happen. It had to be developed. I felt that it was wonderful, like a puzzle, all the parts fitted in: the business training, painting, color study, and my interest in mechanics, machinery and production problems.”[ii]
Kogan’s career as a designer really began to take off after her chance meeting with the head of the Quaker Silver Company of Attleboro, Massachusetts, in the late 1920s. Kogan was hired to design pewter and silver objects on a freelance basis. When she opened her own design studio in 1931, she continued to work with metals but also experimented with different types of plastics and was one of the first in her field to do so.
This serving dish in Cooper-Hewitt’s collection, from circa 1938, is an example of one of Kogan’s works in metal. She was known for always being at the forefront of modern design. This piece demonstrates her keen sense of what was popular in the decorative arts at the time, referencing modernism by using a rectangular form as the backdrop for a pair of linear handles that run through the center of the object.
Kogan’s career was not without adversity and the male-dominated field was inimical toward her, especially at the beginning. But after some “cruelly discouraging years,”[iii] as Kogan put it, her firm began to grow steadily and by the late 1930s, she was employing three women designers. Over the course of her career, Kogan designed objects for many established companies and in 1994 she was awarded with the Personal Recognition Award from the Industrial Designers Society of America (ISDA).
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[i] Pat Kirkham, Women Designers in the USA, 1900-2000: Diversity and Difference (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002): 271.
[ii] Ibid, 272.
[iii] Ibid.
This object was featured in our Object of the Week series in a post titled Belle Kogan: Designing a Place for Women in the Field of Industrial Design.
This object was
donated by
Daniel Morris and Denis Gallion.
It is credited Gift of Daniel Morris and Denis Gallion.
- Compote Compote
- silver.
- Gift of George R. Kravis II.
- 2018-22-25
Its dimensions are
H x W x D: 7.5 × 32.7 × 20.5 cm (2 15/16 × 12 7/8 × 8 1/16 in.)
It has the following markings
On underside of base: [1] “REED & BARTON”, impressed (manufacturer’s mark) [2] arrow and bullseye, impressed (Reed & Barton date symbol for 1936) [3] eagle and globe, impressed (Reed & Barton silverplate mark) [4] “E.P.N.S.’’, each individual letter within a shield, impressed (standard mark) [5] “1605”, impressed (model number) [6] star within circle, impressed
Cite this object as
Serving Dish Serving Dish; Designed by Belle Kogan (American, 1902–2000); Manufactured by Reed & Barton (United States); USA; silver plated, nickel; H x W x D: 7.5 × 32.7 × 20.5 cm (2 15/16 × 12 7/8 × 8 1/16 in.); Gift of Daniel Morris and Denis Gallion; 1993-134-14