- Japanese Ambassador Doll
Japanese Ambassador Dolls was an effect of the Immigration Act of 1924, Japanese immigration to the U.S. was effectively stopped. In order to promote goodwill between the U.S. and Japan, Dr. Sidney Gulick, a former missionary who lived in Japan between 1888 and 1913 who understood the importance of dolls in Japanese culture, initiated a program to send American Friendship Dolls to Japan.
Miss Yamaguchi, a Japanese Ambassador Doll, is one of 58 dolls sent to cities in the U.S. from the Japanese government in November 1927. These dolls were sent in response to gifts of some 700 American Friendship Dolls.
When Miss Yamaguchi arrived in the United States, her first home was Chicago, Illinois, in the Children's Museum at the Art Institute of Chicago. She has lived at the
Museum of International Folk Art since Chicago nativeFlorence Dibell Bartlett founded it in 1953. The doll is part of the collection of Dolls Around the World [http://www.moifa.org/eventsedu/education/girard/dolls%20intro.html Dolls Around the World] at the Museum.The Yoshitoku Doll Company in Tokyo, which made most of the Torei dolls, probably made Miss Yamaguchi. Her body is mostly wood, covered with a skin made of many layers of powdered shell, called gofun. Her eyes are glass, and she has real human hair. All the dolls are made to look like individuals, their costumes differ, as do their features styles. They wear underwear and socks, or tabi, which is unusual for Japanese dolls. They were sent with these special garments to ensure that they had everything they needed to fulfill their duties as ambassadors.
References
External links
[http://www.moifa.org/about/neutrogena.html Miss Yamaguchi Torei Ningyo] (Doll of Gratitude), aJapanese Ambassador Doll (Japan, c. 1927).
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