China doll

A china doll is a doll made partially or wholly out of glazed porcelain. The name comes from china being used to refer to the material porcelain. Colloquially the term china doll is used to refer only to glazed porcelain dolls.[1]

China dolls, 1850-1870 - Fairbanks Museum and Planetarium

A typical china doll has a glazed porcelain head with painted molded hair and a body made of cloth or leather. They range in size from more than 30" (76 cm) tall to 1 inch (2.5 cm). Antique china dolls were predominantly produced in Germany, approximately between 1840 and 1940. Rare and elaborately decorated antique china dolls can have value on the collectors market. Beginning in the mid-20th-century reproductions of china dolls of various quality were produced in Japan and the United States.

History

Typical German 1860s flat top hair style china doll

Antique china dolls were predominantly produced in Germany, approximately between 1840 and 1940,[2] with the peak in popularity between roughly 1840 and 1890. Unglazed bisque dolls became popular after 1850. Harper's Bazaar referred to china dolls as "old fashioned" in 1873, though they continued being made well into the early 20th century.[1] China doll heads were produced in large quantities, counting in the millions. Some of the most prolific manufacturers were companies like Kestner; Conta & Boehme; Alt, Beck and Gottschalck;[1] and Hertwig. Other German companies include Kling, Kister, KPM, and Meissen. China dolls were also produced in Czechoslovakia (Schlaggenwald), Denmark (Royal Copenhagen),[3] France (Barrois, Jacob Petit), Poland (Tielsch), and Sweden (Rörstrand),.[4] The earliest known were made by Kestner, KPM, Meissen and Royal Copenhagen.

The earliest china dolls often depicted grown women. From approximately the 1850s on, child-like china dolls became popular. Blonde-haired china dolls became more prevalent at the end of the 1800s.[1] These dolls display contemporary hairstyles: sausage curls, ribbons or headbands.[1]

Characteristics

Rare c.1840s KPM china doll

A typical china doll has a shoulder head made of glazed whitish porcelain, with painted molded hair and facial features.[1] The glaze gives the doll a characteristic glossy appearance. The head is typically attached to a body made of cloth or leather, sometimes with arms and legs made of porcelain. Some early china head dolls were placed on peg jointed wooden bodies. China doll parts were also sold for the customer to fashion a body and clothing.[1] Some cloth bodied china dolls could be more than 30" (76 cm) tall, and others as small as 3" (7.5 cm). Some china dolls, like the "Frozen Charlotte dolls", were made entirely out of porcelain, with head and body made in one piece without any articulation. The Frozen Charlotte dolls range in size from 2.5 cm (1 inch) in height up to 46 cm (18 inches).[1]

Rare and elaborately decorated antique china dolls can have value on the collectors market. Most china dolls are unmarked or marked with only a size number. Alt, Beck and Gottschalck dolls will sometimes have a size and model number.[2] Rorstrand dolls usually are marked with a model letter and size number on the bottom front of the shoulder plate.[5] KPM, Meissen, and Royal Copenhagen products will bear company markings.[3]

Parian dolls are similar to china dolls in that their heads are made of untinted porcelain, but they are unglazed with a matte finish. They are found on similar body types. They were also mainly made in Germany, from around the 1860s to 1890s.[6]

Reproductions

Reproduction china doll head with characteristic poorly painted appearance

There was a resurgence in the popularity of china dolls in the mid-1900s when many were reproduced in the United States by companies such as Ruth Gibbs of New Jersey and Californians Emma Clear and Mark Farmer,[7] among many others.[8] From the 1930s Emma Clear became renowned for her high quality, finely made reproduction china heads.[8] She also produced some all-original, non-reproduction dolls, including portraits of George and Martha Washington made in the same manner as antique dolls.[9]

Some hobbyists purchased or made molds from original antique china dolls and created reproductions in low fired ceramic.[8] These homemade versions are typically of poor paint quality and may exhibit crazing in the glaze due to poor firing technique.[8][10] Another tip off that such a doll is a reproduction is if it is signed with an individual's name and/or date. The antique dolls were not typically signed in this manner.

There were several models of china dolls made in Japan and marketed in the 20th century too. These doll heads were often labeled only with easily lost stickers inside the heads. They are frequently mistaken for their antique German predecessors. Trading companies in The United States, such as Shackman, Brinn and A A Importing company, distributed these dolls, frequently in kit form. The Standard Doll Co. of Long Island, New York also advertised china dolls in the 1970s.[8] The examples shown here were marketed by A A Importing Company of St. Louis, Missouri. This company was founded in 1934 as a dealer in kerosene lamp parts and is still in business today. Shortly before and after World War II the company's focus changed and they became importers of crystal, art glass and porcelain. Today they specialize in antique reproductions. The blonde doll heads shown here were probably marketed by A A Importing Company after the end of World War 2.[11]

Mid-20th century labeled Japanese reproduction doll heads, made in both glazed porcelain and Parian, and in both blonde and black hair.

References

Footnotes

  1. Coleman, Dorothy S., Elizabeth A., and Evelyn Jk. (1968), "China Head Dolls", The Collector's Encyclopaedia of Dolls Volume One, London: Robert Hale, pp. 118–134, ISBN 0-7090-5598-6
  2. Cieslik 1985, p. 164
  3. Luckey, Pauline (1990), Dolls in Denmark, Loveland, CO: Johnson Printing, pp. 6–7, ISBN 0-9631475-0-1
  4. Jacobs & Faurholt, A Book of Dolls & Doll Houses, Charles Tuttle Co. 1967, pgs. 45, 86-87
  5. Jacobs & Faurholt, A Book of Dolls & Doll Houses, Charles Tuttle Co. 1967, pg. 86-87
  6. Cieslik 1985, p. 5
  7. Mark Farmer Co. 1956-57 Catalog, El Cerrito, California
  8. Granite State Doll Club News Archived 2011-07-17 at the Wayback Machine
  9. Humpty Dumpty Doll Hospital Reproduction of a 1951 Catalog of Products, Borger Publications, 2002
  10. China heads - Antique vs Reproduction
  11. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-01-16. Retrieved 2010-03-04.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Works cited

  • Cieslik, Jurgen & Mariane (1985), German Doll Encyclopedia 1800-1939, Cumberland, MD: Hobby House Press, ISBN 0-87588-238-2

Further reading

  • "Identifying German Chinas 1840s-1930s" by Mary Krombholz : Published in 2004
  • "Chinas, Dolls for Study and Admiration" by Mona Borger : Published in 1983
  • "China, Parian & Bisque German Dolls" by Lydia Richter : Published in 1993
  • "Beloved China Dolls" by Mildred Seeley
  • "Conta & Boehme Porcelain" by Janice and Richard Vogel
  • "Blue Book Dolls & Values" by Jan Foulke, volumes 1-16
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