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Nicholas Sekers

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Nationality
  
Hungarian

Died
  
June 23, 1972, Yugoslavia

Name
  
Nicholas Sekers

Known for
  
Sekers Fabrics

Other names
  
"Miki"


Nicholas Sekers

Born
  
12 December 1910 (
1910-12-12
)
Sopron, Hungary

Occupation
  
Businessman Industrialist

Sir Nicholas T. "Miki" Sekers, , (12 December 1910 in Sopron, Hungary – 23 June 1972 in Yugoslavia) was a British-based industrialist who, with his cousin, founded Sekers Fabrics. He was also a patron of the arts.

Sekers had trained in textile technology in Krefeld, Germany. At the invitation of John Adams (later Lord Adams) who was charged with overcoming the 50% unemployment from which West Cumberland was suffering at the time, Sekers arrived in Britain from Hungary in 1937 with his cousin, Tomi de Gara, to establish West Cumberland Silk Mills at Richmond Hill, Hensingham, West Cumberland, in 1938. During World War II West Cumberland Silk Mills was required to make parachute silk. When supplies of silk ran low, and the new experimental product nylon was introduced as a replacement, Sekers began experimenting with the new synthetic fabric, seeing its potential for dressmaking. An introduction to Christian Dior led to Sekers producing fabrics for him and many others in the field of Dior's ready-to-wear. In the 1960s, Sekers began to design and produce furnishing fabrics. In 1962 he was awarded the Duke of Edinburgh's Award for Elegant Design (now known as the Prince Philip Designers Prize).

He sat on the boards of Glyndeborne, the Royal Opera House, London Philharmonic Orchestra, the London Mozart Players and the Royal Shakespeare Company, and was an early supporter of the painter Percy Kelly. He was an early patron of the portrait painter Judy Cassab and commissioned work by Oliver Messel, Graham Sutherland, John Piper and Suzanne Balkanyi. Sekers established and endowed a trust to convert a barn at his home at Rosehill, Whitehaven, into the Rosehill Theatre.

He appeared as a "castaway" on the BBC Radio programme Desert Island Discs on 22 April 1968.

He was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 1955 for services to the fashion industry, and was knighted in 1965 for services to the arts.

Sekers died on 23 June 1972, in Yugoslavia, while on holiday.

His portrait, a 1969 photograph by Godfrey Argent is in the National Portrait Gallery.

References

Nicholas Sekers Wikipedia