Mlle Pauline Leroux 1833
Wood, wool, silk, braid | 16.0 cm (whole object) | RCIN 72348
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Female doll; wooden; jointed; wearing a laced blue wool bodice with yellow braid trim, long full muslin sleeves, pink silk skirt with blue band at hem and plain blue wool apron.
Provenance
As a child, Princess Victoria (later Queen) made over one hundred dolls with the help of her governess Baroness Louise Lehzen. Most of these dolls survive in the Royal Collection today, after having been carefully packed away by the Princess once she reached her fourteenth birthday. Some dolls represent historic figures or friends of the Princess, but most represent characters from the ballet and from the opera, which Princess Victoria attended regularly, making notes on the various costumes worn, and drawing them once she returned to Kensington Palace. These drawings were then used to help design the dolls' outfits. The dancer Marie Taglioni (1804-84) is the one of the most commonly featured people, but she is not the only dancer represented amongst the dolls. This is the ballerina Pauline Leroux as she appeared in the ballet, 'Massaniello', in 1833.
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Creator(s)
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Medium and techniques
Wood, wool, silk, braid
Measurements
16.0 cm (whole object)