Showing posts with label allegorical tableau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label allegorical tableau. Show all posts

Monday, August 31, 2020

Celebrating the 19th Amendment: Time Travel to the Women's Suffrage Parade in 1913

 

Celebrating the 19th Amendment: 

Time Travel to the Women's Suffrage Parade in 1913


American Girl doll in white nightgown wrapped in red, wired ribbon holding a dance pose with arms out


Liberty makes her "lyrical" entrance to the "Triumphal March" of Verdi's Aida. Liberty, clad in crimson silk, moves across the stage "a flying figure, unfettered and free."

American Girl doll in white nightgown wrapped in red wired ribbon holding a dance pose with arms out; American Girl doll in white nightgown with blue ribbons around her waist and head dances behind the first


Liberty dancing with twisting and turning movements interprets the music concerning a female slave and her struggle for liberty. Liberty dances "triumphant and free."

gray and silver scarf with paper dove silhouettes lying on top


Peace, in a gown of silver and white, releases a dove from the top of the steps. (the tune is the overture from Wagner's Lohengrin). She descends with her attendants who hold olive branches and cornucopias

American Girl doll in white nightgown with green velveteen dress draped across one shoulder in imitation of ancient Roman robes

The final allegorical figure is Hope. Like a "bright spirit" she dances between the Treasury's columns to "Elsa's Dream" from Lohengrin. This music portrays a woman's sentiment of hope amid life and death circumstances. 

When she finishes, Hope will be joined by rainbow-hued attendants to the tune of Dvorak's "Humoreske." Then a troop of 50 children will come out holding balloons. Together they will all dance "merrily" to Mendelssohn's "Spring Song" and greet Columbia at center stage.

All five dolls in their costumes standing and sitting

The rainbow symbolizes a better tomorrow for women. "After a storm comes sunshine and the indication of a beautiful day." Hearing the approach of the Procession, summons to her side, Justice, Charity, Liberty, Peace and Hope, to review with her this "new crusade" of women. The cast assembles, the band plays "America" to form the final tableau.

Time will tell if we are successful at getting the vote. Thank you to the professional actresses and dancers who participated in the tableau. We'll see you at the next march!

(See more in the original archival photos)
Woman Suffrage Postcard 1913 Smithsonian Institution

and original newspapers

Read the specific details that inspired this tableau and the previous sections
Annelise K. Madsen, Columbia and Her Foot Soldiers: Civic Art and the Demand for Change at the 1913 Suffrage Pageant-Procession, Winterthur Portfolio, Vol. 48, No. 4 (Winter 2014), pp. 283-310 (scholarly article)

Original source photographs:
Suffragette Parade Pennsylvania Avenue Stereoscope card at the Library of Congress
Head of Suffrage Parade in Washington, DC March 3, 1913 at the Library of Congress

Read more:
Women's Suffrage 100 Massachusetts film Looking Back, Marching Forward
Crusade for the Vote National Women's History Museum
Parading for Progress National Women's History Museum
Harriet Stanton Blatch New York State Museum
Creating Icons: How We Remember the Woman Suffrage  Smithsonian National Museum of American History
Votes for Women: A Visual History Brandywine River Museum of Art

Original newspaper article on the parade from the San Francisco Chronicle

Celebrating the 19th Amendment: Time Travel to the Women's Suffrage Parade in 1913

 

Celebrating the 19th Amendment: 

Time Travel to the Women's Suffrage Parade in 1913

American Girl doll depicting the goddess Columbia in white nightgown, gray scarf breastplate, red, white and blue bathrobe cap, gold paper helmet, wooden winged creature on a stick

On the steps of the Treasury allegorical tableau is taking place. The procession is intended to show "what woman is striving to achieve, as well as what she has so far attained." The allegory portrays "those ideals toward which both men and women have been struggling through the ages and toward which, in co-operation and equality, they will continue to strive." The band plays "The Star Spangled Banner"

American Girl doll depicting the goddess Columbia in white nightgown, gray scarf breastplate, red, white and blue bathrobe cap, gold paper helmet, wooden winged creature on a stick

Columbia, robed in a blue velvet mantle lined with the stars and stripes, wearing a white silk dress, breast plate and helmet and carrying an eagle-topped scepter in her right hand, emerges from behind the Treasury columns and descends the Treasury steps to the edge of the plaza. She will meet the personified nation and her ideals.

American Girl doll in white nightgown with light purple cloth robe over one shoulder, purple ribbon headband, silver paper sword in hands, American Girl doll representing Columbia (same as above)

After saluting the audience, Columbia then summons Justice who enters to the melodies of Wagner's "Pilgrim's Chorus." Dressed in robes of purple, sword in hand, Justice moves across the stage with her 12 attendants. 

American Girl doll in white nightgown with purple cloth robe over one shoulder, purple ribbon headband, silver sword in hand

Justice's attendants manipulate large parchment-like scrolls as they move towards Columbia.

American Girl doll in white nightgown with purple cloth robe over one shoulder, purple ribbon headband, closed parchment scroll in hand

American Girl doll in white nightgown with purple cloth robe over one shoulder, purple ribbon headband, open parchment scroll in hand


Next comes Charity in robes of blue led by a girl and boy, followed by older girls. They arrive to the tune of Handel's "Largo." After greeting Columbia, Charity takes her place at the front of the plaza at stage left, with Justice and her crew assembled at stage right.

Three American Girl dolls: one in white nightgown with pale blue ribbon sash and headband, one in light blue evening gown with pale blue chiffon scarf over her head, doll representing Columbia from above photos