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Izannah Walker One of America's earliest known female doll makers, Izannah Walker was born in 1817 in Bristol, Rhode Island. In 1873, Walker was granted a patent for her improvements in the manufacture of dolls. In her application Walker claimed her dolls were “inexpensive, easily kept clean, and not apt to injure a young child which may fall upon it.” They also had a classic and enduring charm. Comparisons have been made between Izannah Walker dolls and the portraits of American folk artists such as William Matthew Prior and Erastus Salisbury Field. The instantly recognisable look their work shares continues to inspire modern doll makers. Dixie Redmond, an artist from Maine, has gathered together a weath of information on her blog, the Izannah Walker Chronicles. Today original Izannah Walker dolls with their neatly parted hair and sweet finely painted expressions are extremely collectible and can fetch up to $20,000 at auction. Anthony Scoggins. C ourtesy of M ingeiInternational M useum Bodywork MANON GIGNOUX’S TEXTILE SCULPTURES From Jumeau to Bru the French have a wonderful tradition of doll making. Manon Gignoux continues their exceptional work although her ‘dolls’ are unlike anything a 19th-century child would recognise. Gignoux’s fabric sculptures, dressed objects, clothes and accessories make their home in that difficult to define space between art and fashion. “My creations illustrate the meeting of clothes, body and decor” muses Gignoux. Whether life sized or scaled down to a more traditional doll height most of these curious figures have in common elongated limbs, strangely slender heads and lumpen lower bodies. They also share the same starting point. Their origins can be traced back to Gignoux’s final year in the Duperréé School of Applied Arts in Paris where she studied the clothes worn by workers in the early 20th century. After filling numerous research notebooks she refined her study and focused on themes embodied by the characters of the ‘carpenter’, the ‘washerwoman’ and the ‘woman shopkeeper’.
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Each represents a particular type of fabric wear and tear from repetition, deconstruction and alteration. “My fabric dolls, are a kind of symbolic object, representing attitudes and personalities. I play on the relationship between clothes and object, I dress objects in order to protect them and to tell their story” explains Gignoux. She lists her raw materials as “damaged coverings, darned, made from accumulation with colours faded by time” and they are the basis for other works too; dressed objects, clothes, accessories and installations. All make use of Gignoux’s trademark stained cloths and sepia tones. She may call her work as an ‘aesthetic dis crepancy’ but it seems to add up perfectly. Manon Gignoux Exhibition, 15 May-7 June, Egg, 36 Kinnerton Street, London SW1, T: 020 7235 9315, www.manon-gignoux.com Pretty pair Lynne and Michael Rochehave been making artist dolls together for 28 years in their home in the Georgian city of Bath. Most of their creations are porcelain headed, with finely carved, articulated lime-wood bodies. Lynne outlines the division of this labour of love “Michael carves all the bodies and makes the moulds and I paint them. We have never done any designs for other companies, having always wanted complete control of what we do.” Roche Dolls are treasured for their workmanship. Often it is the tiny accessories and beautiful clothes which accompany a doll that draw out their personality and make them so desirable. Lynne is an expert at creating the outfits which encapsulate the theme of each collection. She uses hand-dyed fabrics, yarns and wonderful vintage fabrics. Lynne admits to a subcon cious preference for a certain era, “I have often gone towards the 50s, harking back to my own childhood.” Yet even when inspired by soft focus memories her attention to detail remains sharp, “I love embroidery and appliquéés and of course knitting which enable details to be in the right scale.” www.roche-dolls.co.uk Care and attention Museums Bethnal Green Museum of Childhood, London, Cambridge Heath Road, London, E2 9PA T: +44 (0)20 8983 5200 www.vam.ac.uk/moc• Deutsches Puppen-und Bäärenmuseum, Sonnengasse 8, 56239 St. Goar, Germany, T: +49 (0 67 41) 72 70, www.deutsches puppen-und-baerenmuseum.de • Doll and Toy Museum of the City of New York, 157 Montague Street, 4th Floor Brooklyn, NY 11201, T: +718 243 0820 www.dtmnyc.org • Mingei International Museum, Balboa Park, 1439 El Prado, San Diego CA 92101, T: +619 239 0003 www.mingei.org • Muséée de la Poupéée, Impasse Berthaud (vers 22 rue Beaubourg) 75003 Paris, France T: +33 (01) 4272 7311, www.museedelapoupeeparis.com • Museum of International Folk Art, Museum Hill, 706 Camino Lejo, off Old Santa Fe Trail, New Mexico T: +505 476 1200 www.moifa.org • Pollock's Toy Museum, 1 Scala Street, London W1T 2HL, T: +44 (0)20 7636 3452, www.pollockstoymuseum.com • Rosalie Whyel Museum of Doll Art, 1116 108th Ave. N.E., Bellevue, WA 98004, T: +425 455 1116, www.dollart.com • Strong National Museum of Play, One Manhattan Square, Rochester, NY 14607, T: +585 263 2700 www.museumofplay.org • The Johnny Gruelle Raggedy Ann & Andy Museum 110 East Main Street, Arcola, Illinois 61910, T: +217 268 4908 www.raggedyann-museum.org • The Toy Museum, Old Count's Chambers of Prague Castle, George Lane 6, T: +420 326 316 595, www.spielzeugmuseum-muenchen.de • Yokohama Doll Museum, 18 Yamashita-cho, Naka-ku, Yokohama 2310023, Japan, T: +45 671 9361, www.welcome.city.yokohama.jp • Hospitals New York Doll Hospital Inc, 787 Lexington Ave., New York T: +212 838 7527 • The Doll Hospital & Toy Soldier Shop, 3947 12 Mile Road, Berkley, MI 48072, T: +248 543 3115, www.reallygreattoys.com •The Dolly Doctors, Tina & Steve Watts, The Doll Infirmary, 13 Windsor Road, Thanington Without, Kent, T: +44 (0)1227 479387 •TLC Doll Hospital, Box 271, Kleinburg, Ontario L0J 1C0, Canada, T: +905 893 1295 www.tlcdollshop.com• Toy Repair Service, Hilary Brown, 5 Scratton Road, Stanford-Le-Hope, Essex, England, T: +44(0)1375 677941, www.toyrepairs.co.uk ••• 75 indulge selvedge.org

Izannah Walker

One of America's earliest known female doll makers,

Izannah Walker was born in 1817 in Bristol, Rhode

Island. In 1873, Walker was granted a patent for

her improvements in the manufacture of dolls. In

her application Walker claimed her dolls were

“inexpensive, easily kept clean, and not apt to injure

a young child which may fall upon it.” They also had

a classic and enduring charm.

Comparisons have been made between Izannah

Walker dolls and the portraits of American folk artists

such as William Matthew Prior and Erastus Salisbury

Field. The instantly recognisable look their work shares

continues to inspire modern doll makers. Dixie

Redmond, an artist from Maine, has gathered together

a weath of information on her blog, the Izannah Walker

Chronicles. Today original Izannah Walker dolls with

their neatly parted hair and sweet finely painted

expressions are extremely collectible and can fetch up

to $20,000 at auction.

Anthony Scoggins. C ourtesy of M ingeiInternational M useum

Bodywork MANON GIGNOUX’S TEXTILE SCULPTURES

From Jumeau to Bru the French have a wonderful

tradition of doll making. Manon Gignoux continues

their exceptional work although her ‘dolls’ are unlike

anything a 19th-century child would recognise.

Gignoux’s fabric sculptures, dressed objects, clothes

and accessories make their home in that difficult to

define space between art and fashion. “My creations

illustrate the meeting of clothes, body and decor”

muses Gignoux.

Whether life sized or scaled down to a more

traditional doll height most of these curious figures

have in common elongated limbs, strangely slender

heads and lumpen lower bodies.

They also share the same starting point. Their

origins can be traced back to Gignoux’s final year

in the Duperréé School of Applied Arts in Paris

where she studied the clothes worn by workers in

the early 20th century. After filling numerous

research notebooks she refined her study and

focused on themes embodied by the characters of

the ‘carpenter’, the ‘washerwoman’ and the

‘woman shopkeeper’.

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