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Nude woman nutcracker – amusing or not?

Posted in Carvings, and collectibles

“Did you see the woman nutcracker?” my auction buddy Janet asked. I had gone through the tables at one of my favorite auction houses and had overlooked it.

So I followed Janet to a table near a back wall and there it lay: a lithe wooden nutcracker carved in the form of a reclining woman, her hands behind her head, her lower body wrapped just above the thighs and her chest exposed. A sunbathing pose. Her hair was carved as long loose strands, and her facial features were small. I was indifferent to her nakedness. It was wood, after all.


The wooden peg holding the left leg in place was missing, but it still worked. You opened her left leg out to the side, placed the nut in her crotch and brought the leg back to meet the right leg, cracking the nut. I’m sure the person who came up with this nutcracker – do you think it was a man or a woman? – got a big laugh out of it. 

I bidded on the nutcracker, expecting it to go for a couple bucks, but someone else wanted it, too. So I ended up paying $9. I wasn’t even sure what I’d do with it.

Once I got it home, I started to get an uneasy feeling about it; it seem a bit offensive. Making women sexual objects seems to come too easily and without much thought. I decided to see how common these lady nutcrackers were. I was also curious to see if there were comparable male nutcrackers – and not those of the famous holiday ballet: I came across not one via Google.

What I found almost suddenly was another female nutcracker from 2008. Someone apparently thought it was a good idea to make fun of one of the most powerful women in the world: Hillary Clinton. A company called Eagleview USA Inc. had turned her into the Hillary Nutcracker in a trademark pantsuit with steel teeth between her legs (“Get kinkier with each nut you crack,” the site intoned). I’m sure someone got a lot of guffaws and laughs off that one, too. Her cost: $17.95.

The company now sells a Bill Clinton corkscrew (the metal corkscrew projects from his crotch). I guess it was supposed to make the Hillary Nutcracker a little more palatable – or help the company make a quick $28.95 for the pair.

I found other women figurals: A black-on-bronze of the lower body of a nude woman. A woman carved of light wood (her lower body ended in a fish-like tail and her head was oversized to accommodate a nut in her mouth). Two silhouetted steel women, joined at the head, from France. (Click on the photo above for a full view.)

These are novelty items, many lacking in both artistry and skilled workmanship. They are no match for the real thing – which I found in my Google search. And my own home. Some years ago, I bought an Art Deco-type table top nutcracker: glass-tempered bowl, chrome and wood cracking mechanism. I don’t use it much, but it’d make a nice centerpiece.

I found some of the oldest and loveliest nutcrackers at the Leavenworth Nutcracker Museum site. Opened in 1995, the Leavenworth, Wash., museum holds the collection of Arlene and George Wagner, who have accumulated 6,000 nutcrackers. The site also offered tips on collecting them.

Man apparently has been cracking nuts for as long as he’s had teeth, and when the nuts got too hard, he used stones. According to the museum website, pitted stones for cracking nuts date back to 4,000 to 8,000 years ago. The Taranto Archaeological National Museum in Taranto, Italy, has the oldest known metal nutcracker – a pair of bronze and gold hands – from the fourth to early 3rd century B.C. The Leavenworth museum says it has a bronze Roman nutcracker from between 200 B.C. and 200 A.D.

Other sites stated that Aristotle reportedly owned a nutcracker around 330 B.C. Leonardo Da Vinci got in on it, too: He is said to have invented a machine to help make wooden figural nutcrackers.  In his book “Nutcrackers (2008),” author Robert Mills wrote that Da Vinci showed people of Florence with nuts attached to whips and mallets for cracking nuts.

One of the best parts of the Leavenworth museum site are photos of its collection of nutcrackers. One of its most recent acquisitions is a circa 1780 item from Italy carved from one piece of walnut. On one side is the head of a lion with a beard and the other, a Satyr mask with a beard of acanthus leaves, according to the website. You lift the chin of the mask, and the lion opens its mouth.

I wondered what nutcrackers I’d find with an African American motif. If the lady nutcracker was somewhat offensive, I was sure that I’d find some of the same ilk with black people as forms. I did not find much, though. I came across one described as a “Negro” head from the 1880s that was sold at auction in 2005.

Here are some from the Nutcrackers for Collectors website. They make the woman look crass and juvenile. Notice the 18th-century brass male and female ones. And the blog inmamaskitchen noted others from the book “The Art & Character of Nutcrackers.”

16 Comments

  1. Hello there
    I have a wooden (possibly ebony) nutcracker in the form of a naked African lady, whose legs open to form part of the cracker. It was acquired at auction with a job lot of other things and I hadn’t noticed it until I started processing the lot.

    To be honest, I’m at a loss what to do with it. Frequently, my website does have items that people might object to (in a mild way) and which i wouldn’t attempt to sell on Etsy, ebay etc. However, I wouldn’t feel happy selling anything on the website that is lewd, distasteful or downright racist. No idea what to do with it now (can’t bear to keep it, can’t bear to get rid of it). Maybe I’ll just stick it in the back of a drawer…..?

    February 5, 2018
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  2. Jennifer
    Jennifer

    I just found one today, same as your picture.
    Mine has a sticker on the back
    Paul Marshall Inc. Gardena California .made in the Philippines

    November 11, 2017
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  3. Nancy
    Nancy

    Hi Sherry,
    I acquired one of these lovely lady nut crackers at our Christmas staff party last night. The person I got it from said she found it on ebay. She said it is vintage and to look for a signature as that would make it more valuable. I found none, but it is so unique that it is valuable to me. Loving the gift. 🙂

    December 17, 2016
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    • sherry
      sherry

      Hi Nancy, I’m not sure if any of these are signed. Even it’s not valuable and you love it, continue to enjoy it.

      Sherry

      December 17, 2016
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  4. Brittany
    Brittany

    I also have inherited a lady nutcracker. Mine is in great, working condition, very dark wood, and has no markings that I can find. My grandfather was a Marine and said he brought it back from Northern Africa (1950s).

    August 24, 2015
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  5. Carolyn
    Carolyn

    I bought mine, and several other wood works, at an estate sale of a retired veteran. I too had the same questions after buying if it was offensive or empowering to women. Art is about interpretation, I have decided to view it as an empowered woman with the power to crush nuts between her thighs. I enjoy having it along with the beautiful wood carved Buddha and canister dated from Thailand 1972. Plus the wooden carving of the middle finger, no one else seems to appreciate.

    June 29, 2015
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  6. Debbie Couillard
    Debbie Couillard

    I have one my father acquired while in the Navy, most likely in Subic Bay in the late 60s. It was the last place he served. It’s one of the things I wish to be passed on to me after my mother passes. I see it as creative not demeaning, if anything, if folks want to read anything into it. I’d say she’s a pretty powerful woman lol.

    October 5, 2014
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  7. I also had one of those nutcrackers. I got mine at Subic Bay in the Philippines in 1967. I was in the Army going to Vietnam on a troop ship (USS General Gordon). I think I paid $5:00 for it and a machete. I had the nutcracker for years, even after her leg was broken off.

    Thanks–Mike

    March 19, 2012
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  8. Cathy Miller
    Cathy Miller

    I too “inherited” the Lady Nutcracker, and a man peeing in a barrel,the barrel can be pushed down.
    Have other odd wooden carvings dad brought home.

    May 12, 2011
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    • sherry
      sherry

      Hi Cathy. I’d love to see and hear more about your wooden carvings.

      Sherry

      May 12, 2011
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  9. ac
    ac

    Hey I just found another site that said they had a relative who purchased one in Hawaii in the 60’s, & has a wooden dish for the nuts too….so that’s 2 from Hawaii that I’ve seen….so that’s my conclusion so far! All the ones online are very similar (some have slight various patterns on legs).

    February 10, 2011
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  10. Shellie
    Shellie

    Hi, I’m posting in response to your lady nutcracker. Your link came up when I was looking under “wooden lady nutcracker”. Yep, I have one too. We found her last week in the nasty basement of a house we just bought in Nebraska, and I was hoping out of all the stuff the last owner left behind, we had finally found an item that was worth something.
    We were thinking she was bought over seas back in the 1950’s. That’s when the previous owner’s father was in the Navy. But who knows, maybe someone bought her as a gag gift not to long ago.
    I did find a brass twin sister of her’s on eBay with bids up to $165 at that time.

    July 28, 2010
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    • sherry
      sherry

      Hi Shelli. I’d like to know how old nutcrackers are and their origin. Good luck in finding something valuable in that basement. Who knows, you might get lucky. That’s what I’m always hoping for when I attend auctions and estate sales.

      July 28, 2010
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      • Shellie
        Shellie

        Hi Sherry 🙂 We have the original paper trail since when the property was sold to the first owner by the government in 1880. I’m sure theres no value in that, but it’s pretty cool just the same.
        I think at this point the only thing of any value that I brought home to look up on line is an old looking, very detailed scalloped serving spoon. The name on the back is Quadruple.
        Like you, I’m always hoping what I find might be worth at least a small fortune. LOL 🙂
        At least it’s a fun hobby!

        July 31, 2010
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      • Annie
        Annie

        Hello,
        I also have one of these wooden lady nutcrackers. I was told my grandfather bought it in Hawaii in the 1950’s or 1960’s while on vacation.

        January 16, 2011
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