Dolly
Description
Poupée mannequin femme. Les bras, les jambes, la tête et la taille sont articulés. Elle possède des cheveux blonds foncés allant jusqu'à la taille. Les yeux dormeurs sont bleus. La bouche est rose vif. Les ongles sont peints en rouge. Elle porte la tenue "Orly" (1920-50) composée d'un long manteau à large col à revers en lainage blanc, bleu foncé et rose, fermé par une ceinture à boucle dorée; d'un polo en jersey noir sans manches; d'une culotte blanche; de bottes en simili-cuir bleu foncé; et d'un sac à bandoulière de la même matière. Le manteau comporte l'étiquette "GéGé haute couture".
About this work
The artwork titled "Dolly", attributed to Gégé (firme), is preserved at musée d'Allard. This piece is listed in the Joconde database of the Ministry of Culture, which catalogues the works held in French museums.
Technique and Materials
This work belongs to the field: jeux - jouets. It was created using the following materials and techniques: matière plastique, laine, simili-cuir, jersey. Its period of creation is identified as: 3rd quarter 20th Century;4th quarter 20th Century.
The Conserving Museum
musée d'Allard preserves this work in its collections. As a « Musée de France » labeled museum, the institution is committed to preserving and showcasing the pieces entrusted to it.
Data sources
The information about this work comes from the Joconde database of the Ministry of Culture, published on data.culture.gouv.fr under the Open License v2.0 (Etalab).
About this artwork
Dolly est une oeuvre de Gégé (firme), conservée au musée d'Allard. La technique employée est : matière plastique, laine, simili-cuir, jersey. Dimensions : Hauteur en cm 50.5 ; Largeur en cm 17 ; Epaisseur en cm 8 ; Poids en g 474. La création de cette oeuvre remonte à la 3e quart 20e siècle;4e quart 20e siècle. Informations complémentaires : L'entreprise GéGé est créée en 1933 par Germain Giroud (1911-1991) à Moingt. Elle ferme en 1979. En 1988, le juge commissaire autorise la vente des actifs à la société Soclaine qui commercialise des poupées GéGé dans les années 1990.
Creation context
Dans quel contexte Gégé (firme) a-t-il créé Dolly ? La 3e quart 20e siècle;4e quart 20e siècle constitue un moment de profonde effervescence créatrice, qui nourrit et stimule la démarche de l'artiste. Le musée d'Allard, qui détient cette œuvre, permet au visiteur de comprendre les liens qui unissent la création artistique aux circonstances historiques de son émergence.
See also
Domain
Author
Related pages
Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know
The work « Dolly » is held at musée d'Allard, an institution labeled as a « Musée de France ». This label guarantees the quality of collection preservation and accessibility to the public.
This artwork is attributed to Gégé (firme) according to the Joconde database of the Ministry of Culture. Check the artist's profile on DellArte to discover their background, other works, and museums that house their creations.
Data comes from the Joconde database of the Ministry of Culture (data.culture.gouv.fr), distributed under Open License v2.0 (Etalab). The records are provided by the museums and validated by the French Museum Service.
The work is part of the collections of a « Musée de France »-labelled museum. Contact the hosting museum to verify if the work is currently on display or held in reserve. Opening hours and admission fees are available on the museum's official website.
Image usage rights depend on the work, the artist, and the museum. If the author died more than 70 years ago, the work is in the public domain in France. Text data (title, technique, dimensions) are under Open License and freely reusable.
The work's record contains information from the Joconde database: title, author, technique and materials used, dimensions, creation period, artistic domain, inventory number, hosting museum, and when available, a digital image.
Use the DellArte contact page to report errors. Since data comes from the Joconde database, major corrections (attribution, dating, technique) should be reported to the Ministry of Culture via data.culture.gouv.fr.
The Joconde database lists over 700,000 works. Use the search bar to find works by the same artist, technique, or period. Each museum entry provides access to its entire digitized collection.
The image resolution depends on the museum's digitization program. Some museums offer high-resolution images through their own digital platforms. The image displayed on DellArte comes from the Joconde database at its dissemination resolution.
Museum shops often sell reproductions of their main works (postcards, posters, art books). For public domain works, services like RMN-Grand Palais (photo.rmn.fr) offer professional photographic reproductions.