Current:Home > ContactBlack dolls made from 1850s to 1940s now on display in Rochester museum exhibit -Thrive Financial Network
Black dolls made from 1850s to 1940s now on display in Rochester museum exhibit
View
Date:2025-04-18 01:10:12
An upstate New York museum is featuring homemade dolls depicting African American life as an homage to their makers and as a jumping off point into the history of oppression faced by the Black community.
Black Dolls, produced by the New-York Historical Society, is on view through Jan. 7 at The Strong National Museum of Play in Rochester, New York.
“These dolls were made between the 1850s and the 1940s,” Allison Robinson, associate curator of exhibitions for the New-York Historical Society, told ABC News. “It allows you to relate to people who really went through overt oppression and racism within their lifetime, from the height of American slavery to the early years of the American Civil Rights Movement. And how these dolls proved to be a way to counter that, and resist that.”
The exhibition celebrates Black dolls and their makers, but “also includes items with racist imagery and language to underscore the challenging circumstances in which the dolls were created,” according to the museum’s website.
Michelle Parnett-Dwyer, a curator at the museum, said these dolls were “made by women who were very isolated from society and may not have been very supported.”
MORE:'10 Million Names' project aims to recover hidden history of enslaved African Americans
“So this was really a form for them to be creative and to embrace their culture and to share that with their children, to have pride and see themselves in their own toys,” Parnett-Dwyer said.
One part of the exhibit features dolls made by Harriet Jacobs, author of “Life of a Slave Girl,” which is “one of the most important slavery narratives in American history,” Robinson said.
After escaping slavery, Jacobs found her way to New York City and worked for the Willis family, who had three little girls. While working for the family, she began writing her autobiography and also made three dolls for the little girls, Parnett-Dwyer said.
The dolls in the exhibit were created using whatever materials were available at the time, such as coconut shells, flower sacks and scraps of fabric, along with seed bags, socks and silk and leather, according to the curators.
Robinson calls the exhibit an “archive” that allows people “to understand the inner world of these women and also appreciate the ways that children would have navigated this challenging period through play.”
MORE: College students hand out over 300 Black baby dolls as Christmas presents to boost girls' self-esteem
The Strong National Museum of Play is the only museum that focuses on preserving the history of play and studying its importance, according to Steve Dubnik, president and CEO of the museum.
“Black history is our history, so having an exhibit that combined history of play for the Black population and for dolls was very important to us and gave us a unique opportunity,” Dubnik said.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Movie armorer in ‘Rust’ fatal shooting pleads not guilty to unrelated gun charge
- Authorities in Haiti question former rebel leader Guy Philippe after the US repatriated him
- Mexico’s minimum wage will rise by 20% next year, to about $14.25 per day
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- 'Kevin!' From filming locations to Macaulay Culkin's age, what to know about 'Home Alone'
- The Essentials: Dove Cameron gets vulnerable on 'Alchemical.' Here are her writing musts
- How Off the Beaten Path Bookstore in Colorado fosters community, support of banned books
- Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
- Dolphins WR Tyreek Hill says he'll cover the salary of videographer suspended by NFL
Ranking
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- AI on the job. Some reviews are in. Useful, irresistible, scary
- UFO Museum in Roswell, New Mexico, reaches 5 million visitors
- Ohio white lung pneumonia cases not linked to China outbreak or novel pathogen, experts say
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- What is January's birthstone? Get to know the the winter month's dazzling gem.
- At least 12 people are missing after heavy rain triggers a landslide and flash floods in Indonesia
- Endless shrimp and other indicators
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Tennessee’s penalties for HIV-positive people are discriminatory, Justice Department says
Michael Latt, advocate and consultant in Hollywood, dies in targeted home invasion
Court orders Texas to move floating buoy barrier that drew backlash from Mexico
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
US proposes plan to protect the snow-dependent Canada lynx before warming shrinks its habitat
Agriculture officials confirm 25th case of cattle anthrax in North Dakota this year
Russia’s Lavrov insists goals in Ukraine are unchanged as he faces criticism at security talks