There are 2 other images of this object. See our image rights statement.
Object Timeline
|
|
1923 |
|
1933 |
|
2015 |
|
2017 |
|
2025 |
|
Cylindrical Cocktail Shaker Cocktail Shaker
This is a cocktail shaker. It was designed by Kem (Karl Emanuel Martin) Weber and manufactured by Friedman Silver Company. It is dated ca. 1928. Its medium is silver plated, nickel, rosewood. It is a part of the Product Design and Decorative Arts department.
Kem Weber was a Berlin-born architect who arrived in the United States in 1914. Along with other architects from Central Europe who came to America at about the same time, including Paul Frankl, Rudolph Schindler, and Ilonka Karasz, Weber would hold great influence over the trajectory of American modernism. After he had made his mark on the west coast, designing modern wares that sold in the “Modes and Manners” shop at the department store Barker Bros., Weber’s influence also secured some roots on the east coast when in 1928, the Friedman Silver Company of Brooklyn issued a Kem Weber signature line of silver-plated tea and coffee services, cocktail shakers, and barware. These contemporary hollowware pieces were designed for mass-manufacture. Weber offered two distinct lines: “Today” and “Silver Style,” to the latter of which this cocktail tray and shaker belong. The shaker and tray’s designs exhibit a piecing together of basic geometries. The shaker’s top shows the ziggurat-like gradation of a skyscraper and is topped with a sleek orb whose handles appear as rounded rectangles. The tray is a simple circle with handles in flat rounded rectangles of wood and metal. Every angle and curve references Weber’s elegant take on machine aesthetics, a point of view similarly executed in his furniture and other decorative designs. Weber once remarked that his approach to designing a product mandated “keeping it simple and swift in line, not overly complicated, and yet giving it a certain rich elegance…that is typically American.” Simple and swift in line, not overly complicated, and a rich elegance are all attributes of these sophisticated drinking accessories.
This object was
donated by
George R. Kravis II.
It is credited Gift of George R. Kravis II.
- Cocktail Shaker Cocktail Shaker
- silver plated, nickel, catalin.
- Gift of George R. Kravis II.
- 2018-22-46-a,b
- Cocktail Shaker With Tray
- sterling silver.
- Gift of George R. Kravis II.
- 2018-22-44-a/c
- Penguin Cocktail Shaker Cocktail Shaker
- silver plated, metal.
- Gift of Rodman A. Heeren.
- 1971-92-1-a,b
Our curators have highlighted 7 objects that are related to this one. Here are three of them, selected at random:
- Gaiety Cocktail Shaker With Lid And Strainer
- metal (chrome plated), enamel.
- Gift of Mel Byars.
- 1991-59-130-a/c
- Cocktail Shaker And Stirer
- chrome plated metal.
- Gift of Mel Byars.
- 1991-59-125-a,b
- Table Lamp
- chrome-plated steel, brass.
- Gift of George R. Kravis II.
- 2015-41-11
Its dimensions are
H x W x D (overall a and b): 26.7 × 18.8 × 11.2 cm (10 1/2 × 7 3/8 × 4 7/16 in.) H x W x D (shaker): 21.6 × 18.8 × 11.2 cm (8 1/2 × 7 3/8 × 4 7/16 in.) H x diam. (lid): 5.5 × 8 cm (2 3/16 × 3 1/8 in.) H x diam. (cork ): 3 × 2.5 cm (1 3/16 in. × 1 in.)
It has the following markings
Underside of shaker base: [1] “Kem Weber" over "DESIGN", impressed (designer's mark ) [2] crown within a lozenge between "J" and "F" within triangles, impressed (manufacturer's mark Friedman Silver Company) [3] “E.P.- N.S.”, impressed (standard mark) [4] "SILVER STYLE", impressed (manufacturer's product line) [5] “8E4”, impressed (model number) [6] "D" within circle, impressed
Cite this object as
Cylindrical Cocktail Shaker Cocktail Shaker; Designed by Kem (Karl Emanuel Martin) Weber (American, b. Germany, 1889–1963); Manufactured by Friedman Silver Company; silver plated, nickel, rosewood; H x W x D (overall a and b): 26.7 × 18.8 × 11.2 cm (10 1/2 × 7 3/8 × 4 7/16 in.) H x W x D (shaker): 21.6 × 18.8 × 11.2 cm (8 1/2 × 7 3/8 × 4 7/16 in.) H x diam. (lid): 5.5 × 8 cm (2 3/16 × 3 1/8 in.) H x diam. (cork ): 3 × 2.5 cm (1 3/16 in. × 1 in.); Gift of George R. Kravis II; 2018-22-30-a,b
This object was previously on display as a part of the exhibition The Jazz Age: American Style in the 1920s.