Saturday, October 12, 2024

BOFA educational exhibit at September Bicentennial Antique Doll & Toy Show

Featured Details from the Belfast Bicentennial Doll Show Event at the Belfast Town Hall 

In September, working with the Western NY Penn Doll Club  BOFA cosponsored the Antique Toy and Doll Show and Sale. Vintage Finds Treasured Memories displayed and sold antique toys at the show. BOFA members Cecy Curcio, Kathy Garrison, Andrew Struckman, Brenda Sisson, Wende Kenyon, Marie Nix, Leah Burgess, Sharon Beiter, and Dylan Mattina generously contributed to the show and/or helped with setting up. 

Belfast Organization for Artists (BOFA)

presents

The Art of Collecting

by Kathy Garrison 

As with all art, the creation of something can be an inspiration for future creativity in many directions.  The “something” created can take many forms, including acquiring a collection of objects.  Today’s exhibit includes collections of old and new dolls and toys, and even antique tools (see Joe Foley’s collection).  Collections can be started from inherited pieces, from a piece that intrigues the passerby, from interest in a deliberate study or research, from a gift, or possibly, from an example to be studied for creation of other items. 

Toys:

1)    The large toys in this exhibit are a fleet of trucks and tractors from the 1950s.  The 4 children who owned them acquired most of them from their grandfather who was a long distance trucker.  These children are now grandparents themselves.  This is a nostalgia collection and inspires fond memories of the people involved.

2)    The doll houses have examples of ½”, 1:12, and larger scale furniture (scaled to the size of the settings) and fall into 3 categories:

a)    Play inspired by the series of classic books of the small Madeline having various adventures in Paris, France.  The Madeline series is available through the Belfast Public Library.  This house encourages the player to think of further adventures for Madeline.  The Belfast Public Library, through interlibrary loan via the Southern Tier Library System (STLS), found all of the Madeline books for this exhibit.

b)   A very creative set of boxes that become a doll house or 2 doll houses.  Furniture and people are added by the player and can take any form.  This doll house is all about creation of scenes, stories, and anything else the player can think of. 

c)     The dollhouse player does not need walls or a roof to create scenes and stories.  The third setup is a sitting room with appropriately sized dolls to inspire the player.  The setting is defined by a paper square that has a wood floor printed on it.

The Dolls in this exhibit fall into several categories of collecting:

1)    International – some of these dolls were inherited pieces.  They became core pieces in growing collections of travel souvenirs.  Some of the dolls were acquired for costume study purposes and eventually inspired a doll couture business, some of the dolls just appealed to the passerby and were acquired and kept.  This exhibit involves multiple individual collections.

2)    Novelty – This is a miscellaneous collection of folklore and fantasy dolls, toy bears, and other stuffed animals.  Some of these items fall into the comfort category for small children.  Some are designed to lean against a pillow on a bed and wait for bedtime.  Some of the folkloric and fantasy pieces are inspired by literary genres.  There are also several dolls that survived the childhoods of some of the collectors and fall into the nostalgia category!  There are also several example dolls who were immensely popular over the last 60 years and became part of a whole franchise of associated items (alternate clothing, doll houses, cars, stories, movies, and many other play aids.)  One example is from the Barbie franchise (Barbie and Ken) and the other is from the Story Book Dolls series (Cinderella).

3)    Couture and fashion dolls – Some of these dolls were acquired for their costumes.  Some were acquired because they pleased the collector.  Different eras of couture are represented.  Many of these dolls were acquired for display and were not suitable for casual play.  

PICTURES COMING SOON! 

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