I posted my small sample of these elsewhere, the same day, I think, but I shot a better sample on Mercator Trading's stall at the show (last London show of last year?), so we can have a better look at this French production now.
Acédo, the plastics 'arm' of Domage et Cie (Domage and Co.), the company also behind Aludo (aluminium production), are responsible for this little set-up! Obviously made in polymerised cellulose acetate, and apparently depicting a peaceful, or civilian take on African life in a rural village, sans modernism!
I wondered about the trees and huts, as they looked a bit homemade
(huts) and converted from something like Playmobil (trees), but a quick
Google that evening revealed similar huts and some similar, but very
different-shaped trees, so I think the pieces were made as flat
sections, or bare boughs, and then assembled, with heat, glue and
hand-held pyro-gravure work - to hide the joins. Portable hairdryers were invented in the
1920's, and can be set 'too hot' (for scalps!), so all very doable.
The running boy and drummer being not warlike, although the full set does include a warrior with spear and shield and a white hunter in pale safari-suit, the warrior is sort of waving his spear & shield as if 'beating' the game toward the hunter.
Close-up of my previously seen sample, other colours of loin-cloth turn-up including dark blue and white, but I don't know what other animals might be considered part of the set, a rhino, hippo, ostrich and more monkeys were in the 'zoo' sets, so there was a species-bank to pick from!
Usually found decorated, and the only one seen, on the day, I don't know if it's a late production thing, unpainted, or if it has been stripped, due to poor wear of the original decoration?
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