Doll
1901 (made)
Place of origin |
Dressed in mourning for the death of Queen Victoria. Wax over composition shoulder head with stuffed cloth body, moulded lower arms and legs, glass eyes and blond mohair wig
lower legs shaped and painted to represent white stockings and yellow heeled shoes
wearing:
black cotton drawers
black silk petticoat
black silk dress and jacket with organza on the skirt and jacket; lace stand up collar
black sequin trim
black bead neck lace
lower legs shaped and painted to represent white stockings and yellow heeled shoes
wearing:
black cotton drawers
black silk petticoat
black silk dress and jacket with organza on the skirt and jacket; lace stand up collar
black sequin trim
black bead neck lace
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | wax over composition, cloth, glass mohair |
Brief description | Doll in Mourning Fashion, German, 1901 |
Physical description | Dressed in mourning for the death of Queen Victoria. Wax over composition shoulder head with stuffed cloth body, moulded lower arms and legs, glass eyes and blond mohair wig lower legs shaped and painted to represent white stockings and yellow heeled shoes wearing: black cotton drawers black silk petticoat black silk dress and jacket with organza on the skirt and jacket; lace stand up collar black sequin trim black bead neck lace |
Dimensions |
|
Production type | mass produced |
Object history | The doll was dressed in fashionable costume by the Powell family. Letitia Clark (born 1741), who married a London merchant called David Powell (born 1725) at the church of St Botolph's Bishopsgate, London in 1761, had a hobby of dressing dolls in the prevailing fashions of her day, in some instances copying her own clothes. Her earliest one shows a dress of 1754. Letitia died in 1801 and David in 1810, but their descendants continued this tradition of dressing dolls until 1912. The dolls were presented to the museum in two gifts: Letitia's great grandson Harry J Powell (born c 1853) gave the earlier group (1754-1853 plus one later one), which came with a number of accompanying pieces of set dressing, such as to-scale tables, chairs and china, in 1919. In 1939 his sister Miss Beatrice P Powell (born c 1863) gave a further twenty four, which wore costumes from 1860-1912), of which this is one. This group did not have accompanying furniture, but often appropriate accessories, including a doll with a tennis racket, one with a croquet mallet and one with a bicycle; one was dressed in mouring for Queen Victoria's death in 1901. Harry and Beatrice Powell and their siblings were doubly descendants of Letitia and David, as their parents Agnes and Nathaniel were Powell cousins. The family at one time owned the Whitefriars glass company, and also included the founder of the Scouting movement, Robert Baden-Powell. |
Production | Reason For Production: retail |
Collection | |
Accession number | T.41-1939 |
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Record created | January 26, 2001 |
Record URL |
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