Doll--"Cornelia" Rendered by Anne Colman (artist), c. 1937 watercolor, gouache, and graphite on paperboard overall: 50.9 x 38.5 cm (20 1/16 x 15 3/16 in.) Original IAD Object: 13" high Index of American Design 1943.8.15385 |
Object 14 of 26
One type of bisque used for dolls was known as "Parian" bisque; this was usually an untinted soft paste or hard paste porcelain. This doll, named "Cornelia," has head, arms, and legs of Parian bisque, with some color added to the cheeks. The doll's body is cloth. The date of the doll is 1876, when Parian dolls with molded hairdos were popular. Wigged dolls' heads, also being made at this time, were principally of tinted bisque. Note the ribbon of self material in her hair. She wears a velvet dress and machine-embroidered cotton underwear. Her eyes are of glass.
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