Horse
January 1998 - August 1998
Place of origin |
wooden branch with the bark remaining
whittled to represent a horse but there is no face only the ears cut out
the chest and rear have no bark and the rear is whittled to indicate a tail
the underside has been flattened so the figure stays upright
whittled to represent a horse but there is no face only the ears cut out
the chest and rear have no bark and the rear is whittled to indicate a tail
the underside has been flattened so the figure stays upright
Object details
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | light wood and bark, whittled |
Brief description | Traditional stylised figure of a horse carved from a tree branch in Estonia in 1998 |
Physical description | wooden branch with the bark remaining whittled to represent a horse but there is no face only the ears cut out the chest and rear have no bark and the rear is whittled to indicate a tail the underside has been flattened so the figure stays upright |
Dimensions |
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Credit line | Given by the Tartu Toy Museum, Estonia |
Object history | Given by the curator of the Tartu Toy Museum, Tiia Toomet, as an example of traditional toys of Estonian peasant children. The gift was accompanied by books by the same person. Historical significance: CATTLE OF WOODEN PEGS Wooden animals were the oldest and most popular traditional toys of Estonian peasant children. To pasture cows and sheep was children's job in old Estonian villages. While looking fter real cattle the children made a toy herd for themselves to play with. They cut animals of branches of trees. The system was simple and similar all over Estonia. Only the most important features of the animal were marked. All aminals have four legs, therefore the legs were not important. But cows and oxen had horns - so the horns were cut to the stick. Pigs were round and had snouts. Horses were distinguished from the other animals by their upright necks. Horse as the most important animals were sometimes made bigger and they got legs and even tails and manes. (Details given by the donor) |
Historical context | This set of toys were made by Estonian children for themselves to play with. |
Production | donated September 9, 1998 |
Associated objects | |
Collection | |
Accession number | B.307-1998 |
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Record created | November 13, 1998 |
Record URL |
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