Toy side chair
Classification:
Date:
1860-1880
Medium:
Wood, paint
Dimensions:
Overall: 7 1/4 x 3 1/2 x 3 3/4 in. ( 18.4 x 8.9 x 9.5 cm )
Description:
Wooden toy chair painted white with brown trim and red accents.
Credit Line:
Gift of Mrs. Marie P.C. Redd, in memory of her mother, Madame Hermance Castegnier
Object Number:
1947.41f
Date Begin:
0
Date End:
1880
eMuseum Object ID:
22569
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.
Toy towel stand
Classification:
Date:
1860-1880
Medium:
Wood, paint
Dimensions:
Overall: 6 x 6 1/4 x 2 1/2 in. ( 15.2 x 15.9 x 6.4 cm )
Description:
Wooden toy towel stand painted white with brown trim and red accents.
Credit Line:
Gift of Mrs. Marie P.C. Redd, in memory of her mother, Madame Hermance Castegnier
Object Number:
1947.41e
Date Begin:
0
Date End:
1880
eMuseum Object ID:
22568
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.
Toy table
Classification:
Date:
1860-1880
Medium:
Wood, paint
Dimensions:
Overall: 5 3/4 x 6 1/4 x 3 1/4 in. ( 14.6 x 15.9 x 8.3 cm )
Description:
Wooden toy table painted white with brown trim and red accents.
Credit Line:
Gift of Mrs. Marie P.C. Redd, in memory of her mother, Madame Hermance Castegnier
Object Number:
1947.41d
Date Begin:
0
Date End:
1880
eMuseum Object ID:
22567
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.
Toy cupboard
Classification:
Date:
1860-1880
Medium:
Wood, paint
Dimensions:
Overall: 7 1/4 x 8 1/4 x 4 in. ( 18.4 x 21 x 10.2 cm )
Description:
Wooden toy cupboard painted white with brown trim and red accents.
Credit Line:
Gift of Mrs. Marie P.C. Redd, in memory of her mother, Madame Hermance Castegnier
Object Number:
1947.41c
Date Begin:
0
Date End:
1880
eMuseum Object ID:
22566
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.
Toy bed
Classification:
Date:
1860-1880
Medium:
Wood, paint
Dimensions:
Overall: 13 x 11 3/4 x 17 1/2 in. ( 33 x 29.8 x 44.4 cm )
Description:
Wooden toy bed painted white with brown trim and red accents.
Credit Line:
Gift of Mrs. Marie P. C. Redd in memory of her mother, Madame Hermance Castegnier
Object Number:
1947.41a
Date Begin:
0
Date End:
1880
eMuseum Object ID:
22565
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.
Paper doll
Collections:
Classification:
Date:
1850-1860
Medium:
Paper, cardboard, paint
Dimensions:
Overall: 7 5/8 x 4 1/4 in. ( 19.4 x 10.8 cm )
Description:
Painted paper cut-out figure with cardboard stand: woman carrying a plate with sliced cake.
Credit Line:
Purchased from Elie Nadelman, 1937
Object Number:
INV.10267cc
Marks:
written: in ink on reverse: "Sophia."
Gallery Label:
Portraying mostly women and children as they perform domestic tasks (sewing, cooking, harvesting, or teaching/learning) and leisure activities (reading, writing letters, painting, or playing music), these richly decorated, hand-painted paper dolls present a broad view of mid-nineteenth-century daily life. The mass commercial appeal of paper dolls arose around 1850 when these dolls began to appear in popular periodicals; however, homemade, hand-painted dolls had been circulating long beforehand. These dolls belong to a larger set of 85 figures, which were crafted around 1855 for a young girl in the Canadian town of Drummondville outside Quebec City, as indicated by an inscription on the reverse of one doll in the set and by a November 1924 article in Harper's Magazine featuring a descendent of the original owner, Ms. Lenox E. Chase. While it is unclear who painted these dolls, and while they may have been produced over an extended period of time given variations in the stock and coloration of the paper, all of the dolls seem to have been crafted by the same artist and each one includes its own unique name, written on the verso by the same hand each time. Genealogical records suggest that the dolls originally belonged to the Sutherland family, a Canadian family of British descent who had arrived in the English-Canadian town of Drummondville by the 1840's, and the dolls eventually would have been passed down to Ms. Chase, from whom Elie Nadelman likely acquired the set for his Museum of Folk and Peasant Arts.
This object was once part of the folk art collection of Elie Nadelman (1882-1946), the avant-garde sculptor. From 1924 to 1934, Nadelman's collection was displayed in his Museum of Folk Arts, located in the Riverdale section of the Bronx. The Historical Society purchased Nadelman's entire collection in 1937.
Provenance:
The Folk Art Collection of Elie Nadelman
Date Begin:
0
Date End:
1860
eMuseum Object ID:
22563
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.
Paper doll
Collections:
Classification:
Date:
1850-1860
Medium:
Paper, cardboard, paint
Dimensions:
Overall: 2 7/8 x 5 1/4 in. ( 7.3 x 13.3 cm )
Description:
Painted paper cut-out figures with cardboard stand: infant asleep in a rocking cradle with small girl arranging the quilt.
Credit Line:
Purchased from Elie Nadelman, 1937
Object Number:
INV.10267aa
Marks:
written: in ink on reverse: "Georges / Marion."
Gallery Label:
Portraying mostly women and children as they perform domestic tasks (sewing, cooking, harvesting, or teaching/learning) and leisure activities (reading, writing letters, painting, or playing music), these richly decorated, hand-painted paper dolls present a broad view of mid-nineteenth-century daily life. The mass commercial appeal of paper dolls arose around 1850 when these dolls began to appear in popular periodicals; however, homemade, hand-painted dolls had been circulating long beforehand. These dolls belong to a larger set of 85 figures, which were crafted around 1855 for a young girl in the Canadian town of Drummondville outside Quebec City, as indicated by an inscription on the reverse of one doll in the set and by a November 1924 article in Harper's Magazine featuring a descendent of the original owner, Ms. Lenox E. Chase. While it is unclear who painted these dolls, and while they may have been produced over an extended period of time given variations in the stock and coloration of the paper, all of the dolls seem to have been crafted by the same artist and each one includes its own unique name, written on the verso by the same hand each time. Genealogical records suggest that the dolls originally belonged to the Sutherland family, a Canadian family of British descent who had arrived in the English-Canadian town of Drummondville by the 1840's, and the dolls eventually would have been passed down to Ms. Chase, from whom Elie Nadelman likely acquired the set for his Museum of Folk and Peasant Arts.
This object was once part of the folk art collection of Elie Nadelman (1882-1946), the avant-garde sculptor. From 1924 to 1934, Nadelman's collection was displayed in his Museum of Folk Arts, located in the Riverdale section of the Bronx. The Historical Society purchased Nadelman's entire collection in 1937.
Provenance:
The Folk Art Collection of Elie Nadelman
Date Begin:
0
Date End:
1860
eMuseum Object ID:
22562
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.
Paper doll
Collections:
Classification:
Date:
1850-1860
Medium:
Paper, cardboard, paint
Dimensions:
Overall: 6 3/8 x 6 1/4 in. ( 16.2 x 15.9 cm )
Description:
Painted paper cut-out figure with cardboard stand: young woman seated under a tree with an open book in her lap and a closed book by her side.
Credit Line:
Purchased from Elie Nadelman, 1937
Object Number:
INV.10267z
Marks:
written: in ink on reverse: "Rose."
Gallery Label:
Portraying mostly women and children as they perform domestic tasks (sewing, cooking, harvesting, or teaching/learning) and leisure activities (reading, writing letters, painting, or playing music), these richly decorated, hand-painted paper dolls present a broad view of mid-nineteenth-century daily life. The mass commercial appeal of paper dolls arose around 1850 when these dolls began to appear in popular periodicals; however, homemade, hand-painted dolls had been circulating long beforehand. These dolls belong to a larger set of 85 figures, which were crafted around 1855 for a young girl in the Canadian town of Drummondville outside Quebec City, as indicated by an inscription on the reverse of one doll in the set and by a November 1924 article in Harper's Magazine featuring a descendent of the original owner, Ms. Lenox E. Chase. While it is unclear who painted these dolls, and while they may have been produced over an extended period of time given variations in the stock and coloration of the paper, all of the dolls seem to have been crafted by the same artist and each one includes its own unique name, written on the verso by the same hand each time. Genealogical records suggest that the dolls originally belonged to the Sutherland family, a Canadian family of British descent who had arrived in the English-Canadian town of Drummondville by the 1840's, and the dolls eventually would have been passed down to Ms. Chase, from whom Elie Nadelman likely acquired the set for his Museum of Folk and Peasant Arts.
This object was once part of the folk art collection of Elie Nadelman (1882-1946), the avant-garde sculptor. From 1924 to 1934, Nadelman's collection was displayed in his Museum of Folk Arts, located in the Riverdale section of the Bronx. The Historical Society purchased Nadelman's entire collection in 1937.
Provenance:
The Folk Art Collection of Elie Nadelman
Date Begin:
0
Date End:
1860
eMuseum Object ID:
22561
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.
Paper doll
Collections:
Classification:
Date:
1850-1860
Medium:
Paper, cardboard, paint
Dimensions:
Overall: 3 7/8 x 4 3/8 in. ( 9.8 x 11.1 cm )
Description:
Painted paper cut-out figure with cardboard stand: seated woman paring apples.
Credit Line:
Purchased from Elie Nadelman, 1937
Object Number:
INV.10267y
Gallery Label:
Portraying mostly women and children as they perform domestic tasks (sewing, cooking, harvesting, or teaching/learning) and leisure activities (reading, writing letters, painting, or playing music), these richly decorated, hand-painted paper dolls present a broad view of mid-nineteenth-century daily life. The mass commercial appeal of paper dolls arose around 1850 when these dolls began to appear in popular periodicals; however, homemade, hand-painted dolls had been circulating long beforehand. These dolls belong to a larger set of 85 figures, which were crafted around 1855 for a young girl in the Canadian town of Drummondville outside Quebec City, as indicated by an inscription on the reverse of one doll in the set and by a November 1924 article in Harper's Magazine featuring a descendent of the original owner, Ms. Lenox E. Chase. While it is unclear who painted these dolls, and while they may have been produced over an extended period of time given variations in the stock and coloration of the paper, all of the dolls seem to have been crafted by the same artist and each one includes its own unique name, written on the verso by the same hand each time. Genealogical records suggest that the dolls originally belonged to the Sutherland family, a Canadian family of British descent who had arrived in the English-Canadian town of Drummondville by the 1840's, and the dolls eventually would have been passed down to Ms. Chase, from whom Elie Nadelman likely acquired the set for his Museum of Folk and Peasant Arts.
This object was once part of the folk art collection of Elie Nadelman (1882-1946), the avant-garde sculptor. From 1924 to 1934, Nadelman's collection was displayed in his Museum of Folk Arts, located in the Riverdale section of the Bronx. The Historical Society purchased Nadelman's entire collection in 1937.
Provenance:
The Folk Art Collection of Elie Nadelman
Date Begin:
0
Date End:
1860
eMuseum Object ID:
22560
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.
Sheep figurines (3)
Classification:
Date:
1850-1900
Medium:
Wood, paint
Dimensions:
Overall: 1 1/4 x 1 1/4 x 1/2 in. ( 3.2 x 3.2 x 1.3 cm )
Description:
Three carved wooden sheep painted with white bodies, black eyes, and red mouths.
Object Number:
INV.1486a-c
Date Begin:
0
Date End:
1900
eMuseum Object ID:
22559
Due to ongoing research, information about this object is subject to change.




