SOLD
Origin: English
Period: Mid 20th Century
Provenance: Unknown
Date: c.1940-50
Height: 45”
Width (Shoulder to Shoulder): 14”
Depth: 7”
The large mid twentieth century period dummy of high build quality, with fully operating eyes, upper lip and mouth in a royal blue jacket and grey trousers, white linen shirt, pink bow tie, checked socks and black patent shoes, the head with short mohair chestnut hair and the body constructed of a combination of paper maché, and plaster composition parts with lower limbs with fabric attachments with the hands painted in a light skin colour. The face is also in a light skin color with the typical Insull reddened cheeks; the lips are painted red, the eyebrows and eyelashes black, the glass eyes a steely light blue.
In good to very good overall original condition, there is only some small chipping to the face and wear commensurate with age elsewhere. The costume for the dummy, is of course a little tired but is of the typical Insull quality. He could benefit from a clean. The three function mechanisms are in good working order.
John Leonard Insull (born 1883) was Britain's leading and most prolific ventriloquial figure maker of the twentieth century and between 1952 and 1974 he produced no less than 2017 pieces. He spent his early days in Wolverhampton and began his career as an apprentice to a joiner, however he soon developed a taste for magic and decided to go on stage under the name of Hinsle, the Comedy Illusionist. He was often assisted by his wife Gertie Rees, who did a clog dance; and eventually they toured the world together. Leonard Insull worked with his son (also named Leonard Insull) who specialized more in animated slot machines. The collaboration ended with the death of his son in 1957 aged 43. He created many hundreds of items for Davenports magic shop. Noted figures include Lord Charles for Ray Allen and Archie Andrews for Peter Brough which sold for £34,000 in 1999. Leonard Insull died in 1974.
The uncanny nature of ventriloquist’s dummies has enthralled and spooked people for decades, and they continue to feature in horror films to this day. The idea of the ghost in the inanimate object is not a new one, Freud has written at length on the subject in his discussions on the uncanny, and ghost stories have featured dolls and portraits coming to life for centuries.
Increasingly difficult to find, and now being more recognised as a superb craft, this is a superb fully loaded example for the serious collector.