N° d'objet
86/123
Titre
New World Cross,
Créateur
Description
This corn dolly, called a ‘New World Cross’, was designed by Lettice Sandford and made by Alec Coker. It consists of a basic cross made from corn stalks, on top of which is a wire circle containing two small fringes of corn ears and a plaited ball-shaped structure.
Description physique
1 corn dolly: corn
Historique d'archive
MERL miscellaneous note Greta Bertram, 20 August 2013 – The 'Coker Collection' of corn dollies was bequeathed to the Museum by Alec Coker, who devoted his retirement from 1965 until his death in 1986 to spreading knowledge of and teaching the craft of corn dolly making. He first became interested in the craft when working at the BBC when he encountered dollies as props on the set of ‘Lorna Doone’ in the 1930s. ‘Corn’ is a term for the family of grains which includes barley, oats, wheat and rye. ‘Corn dolly’ is a wide-ranging term which includes figures, love tokens, crosses, Scandinavian star designs, and Far Eastern shrine dolls made from ‘corn’ straw. Techniques used in the craft include tying, plaiting, weaving and marquetry. The corn dolly was originally an object used in rites and rituals, and in many parts of the world it was believed that the ‘Corn Goddess’ lived in the crop and died when it was harvested. Images of the Goddess, or other talismans, were woven from the last sheaf to be reaped and carefully preserved to ensure an abundant crop the following year. By the twentieth century, corn dollies had lost their ritual associations, and from the 1950s there was a concerted effort to preserve the craft of corn dolly making., MERL 'Handwritten accession' form (Institute of Agricultural History) – ‘Description: New World Cross // Corn stalks from the basic cross. A wire circle is placed on top. Within this, there are two small fringes. The corn ear fringes fan out at opposite ends. At the centre is a plaited ball shaped structure. // Dimensions: 68cm x 41cm // Associated information: This was made by Alec Coker and devised by Lettice Sandford. // References: A. Coker’s Collection List of Corn Dollies no.58’
Nom d'objet
Matériel