Doll, George Glenn

Dublin Core

Title

Doll, George Glenn

Subject

History
Recreational Objects
Communication Objects
Toys
Arts

Description

Doll of George Glenn. Cowboy, 1870, African American male, tan cowboy hat, green sweater, and orange gun hoister.

Starting in the 1960s, I. Roberta Bell, a Chicago school teacher, created a set of 26 dolls to help teach African American history to her students. Each doll was created in the likeness of African Americans who made significant contributions to history. A limited number of copies of the dolls were made over the years.

Their heads and hands were shaped from porcelain clay and skin colors baked into it using a kiln. Faces were hand-painted and wigs of mohair adorn them. The bodies are filled with saw dust. Some dolls took longer than others to make. For instance, creating Harriet Tubman’s head took less than a week while Frederick Douglass’s head took one year.

In 1970, Bell became the first African American to join the National Institute of American Doll Artists.

Creator

I. Roberta Bell

Date

20th Century

Identifier

0086-0223-0012

Medium

Cloth
Ceramic
Hair

Physical Object Item Type Metadata

Donor

Hilda and Milton Geuther

Continent

North America

Country

United States

State

Illinois

City

Chicago

Files

0086-0223-0012.jpg

Collection

Citation

I. Roberta Bell, “Doll, George Glenn,” University of Arkansas Museum, accessed May 2, 2024, https://uamuseum.omeka.net/items/show/75614.