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Tuesday, March 26, 2019
China Heads: An Overview of an Iconic Antique Doll, Children of Glass and Shine
Below is my original post; I am updating with some
information on the Czech Venus figure, which is the oldest known ceramic
object, at least that has survived.For
thousands of years, terracotta and clay figures have survived, and they are
precursors to our porcelain and ceramic dolls and figures.Faience, a paste made of crushed glass, and
sometime sand and clay, dates to the Ancient Egyptians.Some type of glazed ceramics has existed
since the Middle Ages, andDella Robbia
ceramics were popular dating to the Renaissance, and Baroque era.17th century ceramics show up on the British
Antiques Road Show, and also in museums. See the information below as an
update;
Venus of Dolne Vestonice, via Wiki Commons and Public Domain Image
Venus of Dolni Vestonice (26,000 - 24,000
BCE). http://www.visual-arts-cork.com/prehistoric/venus-of-dolni-vestonice.htm.
"The Czech prehistoric sculpture known as
the Dolní Vestonice (Vestonická Venuše) is the oldest known work of terracotta
sculpture in the world. Belonging to the genre of Venus figurines carved
predominantly during the Gravettian culture (c.26,000-20,000 BCE) of the Upper
Paleolithic, this astounding item of prehistoric art was found at a Stone Age
settlement in the Moravian basin south of Brno,
in the CzechRepublic. Like the famous Venus of
Willendorf (c.25,000 BCE), the Venus of Dolni Vestonice now resides in the
Vienna Natural History Museum. Although recently exhibited in the Mammoth
Hunters Exhibition (2006-7) at the NationalMuseum in Prague,
and at the Prehistoric Art in Central Europe show in Brno,
the sculpture is rarely displayed in public, and whenever it leaves Vienna, it is usually
accompanied by an armed escort." (visualarts-cork.com)
China Heads: These glazed porcelain heads
first showed themselves in about 1830-40, with some bald examples called
Bidemeier dolls. Some of these heads boast a black sot for a wig.have excellent examples. There
were glazed figurines even before this, with busts dating to the
17th century, and Della Robbia porcelains dating to the
Renaissance. Glazed pottery were also found in Ancient Rome and Egypt. Meissen and
Staffordshire figurines are older, but it is true that you often see these
types of heads on dolls, and doll heads share the same hairdos. The same is
true of stone bisque or Parian dolls and bonnet heads; their hairdos and faces
early on figurines as well as dolls.
Royal Copenhagen made lovely brown
haired dolls, featured in John Noble's books and in books by Eleanor St. George, and
at least one “portrait” head of Jenny Lind in a dark wig is attributed to
RC. Royal
Doulton joined with Peggy Nisbet of England about this time to create a series
of dolls, including one of the infant prince William and a series of about out
9 in little girls showcasing Days of the Week.
The Chinese and later Japanese brought china production to a
fine art, and these examples, Ming, Satsuma [from which figurine dolls are made
today] and other figures are very collectible. China dishes
seem to come into use in the 18th century, with the
ubiquitous Blue Willow pattern still being used today. I also collect
BW and look for examples in old TV shows like Daniel Boone and Dark
Shadows. You can find a set on display at Hearst Castle in Sam Simeon, too.China comes
from white kaolin clay. I’ve made small
toys and figurines from it, sometimes glazed, in art classes.Bone china,
which I collected in the forms of mini animals and teacups, actually is fired
with ground bone and ash. Wedgwood, Noritake, and Royal Doulton
still make fine bone china dishes. Haviland china is another company that made gorgeous china in various patterns.
For me, china heads are the quintessential antique dolls. I saw my first
ones when I was in kindergarten, and received my first when I was 8, not
counting the Frozen Charlotte Mom and I bought at the Women’s Club Antique Show
when I was 7. My first was Japanese, with the molded bobbed hairdo young girls wore
in the fifties. She is made by Holt Howard and has a head for a Christmas angel, with a cone shaped cardboard body
covered with red feathers, wire chenille covered arms, and a gilt songbook. Her
features are painted and her hair is white. I still have her, but she is on a regular
doll body with china limbs. She wears a red velvet medieval Barbie sized dress
Mom sewed, and a black lace flower hat to conceal damage and cracks.My Aunt Rose
gave her to me, and she also made in ceramics the second china head in my
collection.This was a 24 in low brow, black glazed hair for Xmas
1968. The doll has china limbs, with high heeled painted black boots and
garters. She is dressed in white silk damask with a white lace overskirt,
and red ribbon trim. She wears a black velvet choker, as I did at the time,
only where mine had a cameo, hers has a tear shaped agate. My mother
knitted her a red shawl, and sewed a wardrobe of bright materials from Aunt Rose and my
grandma. There is an antique flannel nightgown, underwear, dotted Swiss in
red, red and blue polka dots, brown print and blue print with daisies and
vintage flowers, a bright yellow daisy print, and a few hats and
bonnets. All lived in a vinyl Barbie case! The next dolls also 1968, was a replica, that would fool an
exert. She wears a red leg o’ mutton dress and lingerie. Her molded shoes are
white, high heeled, button down shoes. She is from The Tinkerbell Toy Shop in
Disney. I have her receipt still. She cost $20.00 in 1968, a huge
sum for dolls. She is a little thinner than Aunt Rose’s Doll, but can wear her
clothes. I added for her a flannel jacket in green with removable felt
symbols for each season. The China Sisters, Rose and Rosalie had
many adventures, and are honored members of The Museum. Rosalie, from The Magic Kingdom, was meant to be another Xmas
gift. When Mom saw the Rose doll, lying in its beautiful tissue lined
box, she waited until Valentine’s Day 1969 to give her to me. I was
ecstatic. She was a big sister to the dollhouse dolls, and could use their
attic as a bed, where she could lie flat comfortably, if a little
claustrophobically.
Mid century china and ceramic figures, I made the lavender doll, which also plays music, and the blue glazed figure in the back.
My first antique “low brow” doll was five inches high, all
cloth, with cloth arms and legs.Mom sewed her a yellow eyelet and batiste
dress she still wears.My first large low brow with black hair
was a name head, “Helen,” and I got her at 15.Many whole and
fragmented “low brows” joined the collection, many doll house sized, some
replicas I made from kits created for doll houses by my friend Violet Page
Early china head with vertical curls. Author's Collection. Purchased from Nancy McCray
Artists rendition of a Marie Antoinette head with Dresden flowers. Author's Collection
Aunt Rose made me an replica with
red hair, a ribbon, and flat boots.She wore a green dress similar to Rose’s
white one. Mrs. Brandmeyer of the 18th Avenue Doll
Hospital assembled and dressed her Another small doll in the style of
highland Mary never was glazed! I got impatient, and Mom and I made her a
body and dress.Later, I found a Marie Antoinette, Sherman Smith doll, and two
other Smith dolls on wooden bodies, more Xmas Angels, including choirboys, in
sizes from 3 inches to 9 There were more and more half dolls to
explore, including some with Medieval headdress Eleanor St. George considered
china heads though they were pincushion or half dolls. My largest ceramic head is about
12 inches high with such a style, she is an artist head by my friend Violet,
and she “nodded” forward in the kiln due to her weight. There are also Spanish china heads with wigs and
painted features from Balos, and some from Capo di Monti and Marin, Italy
and Spain.I learned of Rohmer dolls, with zinc bodies, and Huret dolls,
with glass eyes and wigs. I added a Patty Jene artist doll of a
china head with a wig. She was assembled with old limbs and
clothes, and has re-1860 colored flat boots.
Alice type shard; author's collection
Low brow style head; public domain
Done in Parian style, Emma Clear's Pink Scarf Queen Louise, type. Former Mary Merritt Doll Museum. Author's Collection. Napoleon called the real Queen Louse his "beautiful enemy."
Artists head with Desden flowers. Via Etsy. Author's colletion.
Vintage French type china head iwth glass eyes. Via Old Eclectics, but author's collection.
Beautiful large doll I found at Goodwill auctions; she has had some repair. All original and about 30 inches.
He is not perfect, but is unusual. Pink tinted frozen Charlie.
Vintage low brow next to a Flora Dora.
This little girl has a vintage china doll's face, but she is made of shells. She comes from Delphi; home of The Oracle. Our tour guide gave her to me when I was there, age nine.
Blonde china, all original, sweet face. Author's collection.
Vintage china and bisque heads, including one on the left from a Goebel mode. Author's collection.
Unusual china fragment with molded hat. Author's collection. Via Ruby Lane.
Greek bottle doll that had Ouzo in it. She represents Queen Amalia, first modern queen of Greece. Author's collection.
Vintage male and female china heads via ebay. Author's collection.
The grape lady, made from an Emma Clear mold.
Holt Howard china head angel.
Tiny, 5 inch all original Civil War China head.
Third from right, my first low brow, made by Aunt Rose, with assorted antique and vintage dolls.
My rarest is a man’s head, with black hair, painted eyes,
goatee and mustache. I think he may represent Napoleon III,
husband of Eugenie, and I have an old head representing Eugenie
herself.
There is a Victoria
doll from Shackman, and several Jenny Linds, one by Emma Clear, on an antique.
One small doll has a waterfall hairdo in a net. There are swivel necked chinas, and I have one in bisque from
Japan with the curly lowbrow hairdo.I think these dolls are meant to have a
Gibson girl type hair do with the rest of their hair pinned up in back.They are the
most common and plentiful, and cost pennies. Many were made by Hertel and Schwab and Hertwig, and
some were found intact after the Iron Curtain came down, in their original East
German Factories.Shards of these and other bisque dolls that were thrown out
are still buried in the soil and turn up from time to time. I have a box of them, sent from Germany,
with the dirt in which they were buried still clinging to them.The box still
has its German label.
Frozen Charlottes, courtesy Theriault's
Tours allow visitors to go the factory sites to scoop u as many
shards as they can carry, or at least they did. There is a brisk trade in Etsy,
eBay, and other online sites for these doll heads and shards.Artists use
them for art dolls, found art, shadow boxes, and jewelry.I make pins
from them, and I bought several Christmas ornaments form the Cincinnati Art
Museum and other galleries this year. I also make barrettes.I have some
doll heads that were buried, some in ancient privies!Sanitized these
many years later, my mother and I made dolls from them.
Heads, Bussey collection. See credits below.
China Heads Bussey Collection, Old Theshers, Mt. Prospect, IA. Photo by Author
Vintage Head, courtesy Jo Smith, Australia.
Ruth Gibbs made china heads under Godey’s Ladies Dolls
trademark.I have several of the small six-inch versions, and one large
12-inch version with painted jewelry.Glass eye dolls, men, dolls with teeth and sleeping eyes, a
super rare example owned by a friend with sleep eyes, china bonnet heads, all
china Frozen Charlottes, dolls with fruit and flowers molded in their hair,
these are the rarities of China heads. Limbach made many like this in bisque
and china, including the bisque Irish Queen. We have a couple vintage all china dolls, some made in the Motschmann style, and one perhaps by artist/author Helen Young. I have one china head that is a replica of a metal Minerva!
Vintage china low brow, a gift from my friend LJK, with other collectibles and a sketch by my friend, Dan Johnson.
Early china head from estate of attorney Mabel Brown, who lived to be 99, and practiced law within days of her death. Glazed vintage bonnet head, lower left. Spooky Halloween Frankie, lower right, Spirit of Halloween. Our museum is nothing if not eclectic.
My mother, age 2, clutching a favorite doll. I owe my collection to her and to my dad.
Emma Clear, of the legendary Humpty Dumpty Doll Hospital is
credited with making the first “modern” china heads, now over 70 years old
themselves. These are excellent dolls, and we have several, including the mold
for her grape lady. We purchased the ink scarf doll from the Marry Merritt
Museum and treasure her. She was an absentee bid, and the hammer
came down online for us to our God Bless Noel
Barrette auctions!
I have a china bonnet head, about six inches long, with brown
eyes that I bought from noted authority Helen Draves. I also have a
half doll with gray hear and brown eyes mom bought in about 1983 at a local
doll show while I was still in law school.
There are china dolls from Tibet, in traditional costume, of
blue and white china that looks delft.There are Japanese heads, very early,
that look to some like the famous Nymhenberg, so called c china head which 18th c may now be an early twentieth
century doll.
Author's Collection
Lowbrow dolls are featured in Disney’s’ film Child of
Glass, and Grace Ingalls allegedly had one, as did the mean Nellie
Olesen. Other china heads are used as props in the TV show Little House on the Prairie. One of my Chinese heads has a molded tricorner hat; he represents
a British soldier with blonde hair, but Asian features.He came from a
store called “Z Best things in Life,” San Jose in the 80s.
Video I did
The jewel of my china head collection is a 29 inch pink tinted doll attributed to Rohmer. Her maroon suit, boots, and hat are all original to her. She has a kid body and is magnificent. I have a small, 14 inch artists doll that is vintage, and a vintage china head with glass eyes and wig. I would love to have one of the very rare china heads with sleep eyes and wig, or the Laura Treskow doll featured in many books that has teeth.
Rare china head with teeth and glass eyes. Former Laura Treskow collection. Photo by author via Encyclopedia of Dolls, vol. I, Coleman.
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