Doll Item Number: Ed1.134 from the MOA: University of British Columbia

Description

Figure representing a person on a flat backing of white paper. Front view is depicted of the figure which is made of cloth lightly padded to give a three-dimensional effect having each portion made of a separate piece of cloth with painted details. Hands are made of paper. Face is made of white silk. Figure's left hand is holding a folded red, and green fan. Wearing a black straight-sided hat with a flat crown, and a wide brim, light grey silk robe tied to the right upper front with a ribbon of the same, dark grey full trousers, white leggings, socks, and black shoes. Two pieces of white flannel hemmed with light green silk thread with a loop of the same at the top are sewn to the paper backing.

History Of Use

Probably made for sale to European and North Americans, possibly under missionary influence. Figure represents Korean upper class man of late 19th to early 20th centuries. The black hat, made of horsehair or silk and bamboo, is now worn only by elderly rural men. Under the hat men wore their hair in a topknot with a horsehair band around the head. The hat was tied under the chin with black ribbons. The silk coat was worn out of doors. The traditional fan with curved sides was used by the upper classes.

Narrative

Collected by J. H. Morris while he was chief engineer for Seoul Railway, Korea.