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Carved lacquer

Carved lacquer or Qidiao (Chinese: 漆雕) is a distinctive Chinese form of decorated lacquerware. While lacquer has been used in China for at least 3,000 years,[1] the technique of carving into very thick coatings of it appears to have been developed in the 12th century CE. It is extremely time-consuming to produce, and has always been a luxury product, essentially restricted to China,[2] though imitated in Japanese lacquer in somewhat different styles. The producing process is called Diaoqi (雕漆, carving lacquer).

Box with the character for "Spring" (), Qianlong period, Qing dynasty. Nanjing Museum
Changfang Pan (rectangular tray) with Sword-Pommel Pattern, black with red layers, Middle Ming, about 1450–1550

Though most surviving examples are from the Ming and Qing dynasties, the main types of subject matter for the carvings were all begun under the Song dynasty, and the development of both these and the technique of carving were essentially over by the early Ming. These types were the abstract guri or Sword-Pommel pattern, figures in a landscape, and birds and plants. To these some designs with religious symbols, animals, auspicious characters (right) and imperial dragons can be added.[3]

Tuoyuan pan (oval tray) with people in a landscape, 24.5 cm wide, Yuan

The objects made in the technique are a wide range of small types, but are mostly practical vessels or containers such as boxes, plates and trays. Some screens and pieces of Chinese furniture were made. Carved lacquer is only rarely combined with painting in lacquer and other lacquer techniques.[4]

History

Later Chinese writers dated the introduction of carved lacquer to the Tang dynasty (618–906), and many modern writers have pointed to some late Tang pieces of armour found on the Silk Road by Aurel Stein and now in the British Museum. These are red and black lacquer on camel hide, but the lacquer is very thin, "less than one millimeter in thickness", and the effect very different, with simple abstract shapes on a plain field and almost no impression of relief.[5]

Song dynasty, and the main types of subject matter

 
Foliated dish or tray in the tixi technique with the guri or "Sword-Pommel Pattern", here using red with three thin layers of black. The polished top layer of red contrasts with the duller bottom layer. Early Ming.

The style of carving into thick lacquer used later is first seen in the Southern Song (1127–1279), following the development of techniques for making very thick lacquer.[6] There is some evidence from literary sources that it had existed in the late Tang.[7] At first the style of decoration used is known as guri (屈輪) from the Japanese word for the ring-pommel of a sword, where the same motifs were used in metal, and is often called the "Sword-Pommel pattern" in English. This style uses a family of repeated two-branched scrolling shapes cut with a rounded profile at the surface, but below that a "V" section through layers of lacquer in different colours (black, red and yellow, and later green), giving a "marbled" effect from the contrasted colours; this technique is called tìxī (剔犀) in Chinese. This style continued to be used up to the Ming dynasty, especially on small boxes and jars with covers, though after the Song only red was often used, and the motifs were often carved with wider flat spaces at the bottom level to be exposed.[8]

Most Song carved lacquer to survive is in the guri and tixi style and technique,[9] but the period also saw the development of a pictorial style, and the beginning of the two other main streams of iconography that were to dominate the rest of the history of carved lacquer, though surviving examples from the Song are rare. Both relate to Chinese art in other media, and use the existing vocabulary of Chinese ornament for borders. The first type of subject is scenes of people in a landscape, derived mainly from Chinese painting and woodcut book illustrations; such scenes were only later to be found in Chinese ceramics. The settings quickly became fairly standardized, with a few figures close to one or more buildings, in a garden setting, perhaps near water or a road (the English chinoiserie "Willow pattern" is just such a scene). A convention developed by which the areas of sky, water and land (floor or ground) left largely blank in paintings are filled in with discreet patterns derived from textiles, known as "brocade-grounds" and also "diaper backgrounds"; this convention has continued to modern times. Standard groups of patterns for each type are followed in work from the imperial workshops, but may be mixed up in work from the commercial workshops. The precise form of patterns used can be a factor in dating pieces,[10] but in general "The background diaper of sky consisted of looping clouds, diapers representing water were cut in rhomboid curves for waves, and the land and paving had diapers with geometricized flowers".[11]

The other main type of subject was birds against a foliage background that filled the whole carved area, or just flowers and foliage treated in the same way. Dragons and phoenixes were also treated in this style, and became very prominent in Ming imperial works (see below). A design of this type known as the "two birds" was especially successful aesthetically and often used; in later examples the birds are often the fenghuang or Chinese phoenix. The style continued to develop until reaching its finest period in the early Ming dynasty, and has continued to be produced. Plant decoration of this sort was later generally used to fill in borders and other spaces around other types of subject, such as the edges and legs of furniture.[12] This style relates to a broad tradition of Chinese ornament reaching back into Chinese antiquity in stone reliefs, metalwork and other media, including ceramics.[13]

Lacquer was among the luxury products often given by the emperor as diplomatic or political gifts, or to the subsidiary courts of princes of the imperial house. Japanese collections, often accumulated in temples, have a high proportion of the surviving early Chinese carved lacquer pieces.[14] The Engaku-ji temple in Kamakura has an especially important group of pieces, some of which are credibly reputed to have been brought to Japan by its founder, a refugee monk escaping the fall of the Song dynasty to the Mongols in 1279.[15]

Guri pattern and tixi technique

Yuan

 
Dish with roses, Yuan dynasty, 16 cm across

In the Yuan dynasty the development of Song styles continued, especially from about 1320, after something of a hiatus (as also seen in other arts).[16] Pieces in the Sword-Pommel pattern have more rounded tops to the ridges, and more narrow bottoms.[17] The artistic quality of carving was perhaps never higher, in all the main streams of iconography: Sword-Pommel pattern, birds, flowers and foliage, and figures in landscapes. In the crowded, "exuberant and complex" designs with birds and plants, the forms overlap and curl in a more sculptural fashion, allowed by slightly thicker lacquer.[18]

By the late Yuan the reputation of individual masters has come down to us, although few pieces are signed and even these cannot be very confidently assigned to an artist, as the signatures may not be genuine. Yang Mao and Zhang Cheng were the most famous masters, both from Jiaxing in the southern province of Zhejiang.[19]

Bird and plant designs

Ming

 
Ming Wanli period tray with "frontal" dragon against a background of clouds, with a floral border. Red over rather faded buff yellow lacquer

Chinese diplomatic gifts to the Japanese government in the early Ming are especially well-documented on the Japanese side, at a time when the Ashikaga shogunate was enjoying a period of improved relations with China. In 1403 a consignment of luxury goods, also including Chinese silks and lacquered Chinese furniture, had 58 pieces of carved red lacquerware in a range of shapes. Lists with descriptions and measurements that allow some surviving pieces to be identified also survive from 1406, 1407, 1433 and 1434. These confirm that carved red lacquer was already "the favored type of lacquer for court use" by this point.[20]

Most early production of lacquer had been in the more suitable hot and moist climate of the south,[21] but from the early Ming onwards the finest work was often from official workshops in Beijing, and the best early Ming work is "technically ... as near perfection as has ever been possible".[22] The "Orchard Factory" was founded around 1416 in Lingjing hutong in Beijing, near the Forbidden City. It used imported workers from the south, the masters from Jiaxing in Zhejiang province, and other workers from Yunnan and Sichuan.[23] As part of the internal tax or tribute system, about 5,000 workers from the south were required to work in the imperial workshops for terms of four years.[24] The raw lacquer was also imported from the south, as the Chinese lacquer tree will not grow as far north as Beijing. But the Orchard Factory closed in 1436, after only some 20 years of operations.[25] The production of imperial wares seems to have lapsed between 1436 and 1522, after another Mongol invasion, from which lacquer production took longer to recover than Jingdezhen porcelain.[26]

 
The Ming table in the Victoria and Albert Museum, 1425–1436

In the Ming period the dragon became a key imperial symbol, very often appearing on lacquer from the imperial workshops for the use of the court, or made to be given by the emperor.[27] Initially the dragon's head was seen in the traditional profile but in the middle of the 15th century the "frontal" dragon, seen looking out full-face at the viewer, was introduced and soon became the norm in lacquer as in other media.[28]

By at least the Ming dynasty carved lacquer was being used all over the visible surfaces of pieces of furniture, a dauntingly expensive proposition. One of the best known pieces is a desk-sized table with three drawers in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, whose top has a typical imperial Ming design with a central dragon and phoenix, symbolizing the emperor and empress respectively. The table-top measures 119.5 cm by 84.5 cm and it was produced between 1425 and 1436 in the "Orchard Factory", and is the only piece of its size to survive from their production, the best period of Ming workmanship. As with many other pieces, the ground of the relief was originally a yellow that contrasted with the red of the upper layers, but has now faded to a dark colour.[29] Black grounds under red carved layers were also common from this period, but in some cases what now appears black may originally have been green.[30] A less common type, often of very high quality, has black upper layers on a red ground.[31]

From about 1400, the "brocade-ground" patterns already used for floors and sky in scenes of figures in a landscape were also used in depicting plant designs, both on the backgrounds and on the leaves or fruits of the plants themselves, "a curious development". More logically, they were also used for the background of non-representational designs such as characters of Chinese script.[32]

Though sometimes used earlier,[33] polychrome carved lacquer in a variety of the tixi technique was only prominent during the period between the Jiajing Emperor and Wanli Emperor (1521–1620). This involved carving different parts of the image down to expose a layer in a different colour, so building up a coloured image.[34]

Landscape and figure designs

Qing

 
Detail of 18th-century snuff bottle with Children at Play, and three types of diaper background for ground, water and sky. The top layers are worn from use.

Another imperial factory was founded beside the Forbidden City in 1680 under the Qing dynasty by the Kangxi Emperor and was still producing under the Qianlong Emperor (1736–95),[35] "one of the most prodigal spenders in Chinese history" and a great lover of carved lacquer. Referring to the traditional complaints, stretching back to the Han dynasty,[36] about the cost to the imperial budget of "ordinary" lacquerware, he had a carved Ming piece in the imperial collection engraved with an inscription beginning "Lacquer is cause for ten officials to complain; what if it is also carved?".[37]

 
A pair of vases, late Qing dynasty. Adilnor Collection, Sweden.

By the Qing period the repertoire of subjects for carved lacquer was essentially complete, but one addition in the Qianlong reign was a few pieces showing foreigners, mostly Central Asians bearing tribute though landscapes.[38] Combination techniques of other techniques sometimes included carving, but more often slightly raised areas built up by applying fillers to the base surface before the lacquer was applied.[39]

After the death of the Qianlong Emperor both the quality and quantity of imperial production sharply declined, and has never reached the previous standard again.[40]

Manufacturing process

 
He (box) with a Scholar and Attendants in a Garden, Early Ming. About halfway-up a "horizon" can be seen as the diaper background pattern changes from water to sky.
 
"Two birds" tray in black lacquer, Yuan (1260–1368)

The lacquer, sap from the Toxicodendron vernicifluum lacquer tree that is native to China, is mixed with colourings, with the usual colours being red from cinnabar, by far the most common, black from carbon (probably Chinese ink and soot),[41] and a yellow or buff from orpiment,[42] which is liable to fade to a dark colour and is often now hardly apparent. There appears to have been a change in the early Ming from using red from natural mineral cinnabar to synthetic vermilion.[43] Some time after this, the colouring of the red changed from the previous brownish-red shade to a "bright scarlet", for reasons that remain unclear.[44] The chemistry of other common pigments known to the Chinese at this period appears to have made them unsuitable for use in lacquer.[45]

The base is usually of wood, though other materials may be used. Often the base of flatter pieces is made of two pieces of wood glued one on top of the other, with their grains running at right angles to each other. This helps the finished piece withstand stresses from different directions. Nonetheless, early pieces often show some warping and cracking.[46] The wood was often covered with a glued-on coarse cloth made from ramie or hemp before the lacquer was applied.[47]

The base is coated with a succession of coats or layers of lacquer, each of which must be allowed to dry and harden slowly in a warm temperature of 70 to 80 °F (21 to 27 °C) with high humidity (75% to 85%) before the next is applied.[48] The drying time for each coat has been said to take weeks,[49] "several days",[50] 48 hours,[51] or a day.[52] It has been noted that "there is a great diversity in the literature .... about the numbers of layers involved. Estimates ...vary between a few and over 300".[53] It is often stated that the number of coats in the best quality pieces reaches into the low hundreds,[54] though it has also been said that microscopic examination of pieces does not support such high numbers,[55]

The lacquer is then carved with knives and other metal tools. Usually the general large areas of the composition were carved down to the right level first, then the main forms followed by the details, and lastly the patterns in the backgrounds. Finally any polishing needed is done; the best pieces had also been polished after each coat was hard. Modern works often use a number of shortcuts, including starting with carving most of the design in relief on the base wood, so greatly reducing the depth of actual lacquer required (this has been also been done in the Japanese kamakura-bori technique since around the 15th century [56]). Additives are also added in large amounts to the lacquer, or cast resin or other materials used instead.[57]

Nowadays there are less than 20 diaoqi masters who can still perform the craft.[58] Because of its endangered status, it has been listed as a Chinese intangible cultural heritage.[59]

Uses

Lacquerware has been described as "not unlike modern plastic in that it is light, durable and clean".[60] Other types of lacquerware were widely used as tablewares, but the pictorial style of carved lacquer is less suitable for this, with intricate sunk corners that would be hard to clean of wet food remains. Partly for this reason, wide flattish shapes that are called dishes in other media, such as ceramics, tend to be rather more flat and to be called "trays" when in lacquer. Nonetheless, there is evidence that carved lacquer was used for serving food. Ming paintings of court scenes show food for "imperial picnics" being carried by court eunuchs in round lidded boxes in carved lacquer, a common shape that can reach nearly 40 cm across.[61] The interior of these is almost always plain lacquer, greatly reducing the problem of keeping them clean, and the food itself may have been wrapped or in ceramic containers. A Yongle reign dish or tray 35 cm wide, probably made at the Orchard Factory and now in the British Museum, has a rare inscription indicating the use of the piece, as it declares it the property of the "Imperial Household Department of Sweetmeats and Delicacies".[62]

Lacquer was more often used for cup-stands (or bowl-stands), a sort of saucer with an integral raised hollow tube at the centre to hold the cup,[63] than actual cups, but sometimes the exterior of these is carved lacquer, especially in the guri style, while the interior lacquer is smooth. As in other materials, there is a considerable overlap between the pieces used for serving and drinking tea, wine, and other drinks.

Items for the scholar's desk, including brush pens with their matching covers,[64] were often made in carved lacquer, as were those for the male and female toilet. The "Studio of the Three Rarities", the Qianlong Emperor's study in his main Beijing apartments, had an elaborate writing set in carved lacquer and other materials, including some of the visual tricks he enjoyed, such as a lacquer and ivory "book" that was actually a box containing his rhyming dictionary.[65] Many smaller round boxes are described in the literature as "incense boxes", and a type of late Ming rectangular box with rounded corners was apparently mainly or initially used for the ceremonial presentation of documents or gifts.[66]

Craig Clunas suggests that in looking at pictorial scenes, we should be alert to possible connections in what may seem general genre scenes to specific major life events, as such pieces were used and reused among the elite to carry and themselves to be gifts on such occasions as a marriage, birth of a child, birthday, passing the imperial examinations, moving house, promotion and retirement. Specific episodes from the history of famous literati or literature may be intended; in paintings such subjects are likely to be made clear by inscriptions, but not on lacquer.[67] In addition to presentation pieces, boxes in all types of lacquer were used in elite society as containers to send gifts of food, where the recipient was intended, after admiring the container, to send it back containing another gift.[68]

Notes

  1. ^ Grove
  2. ^ Grove; Cinnabar
  3. ^ Grove
  4. ^ Watt and Ford, 3
  5. ^ Watt and Ford, 6–7 (7 quoted); British Museum collection database, see "Curator's comments"; Kuwayama, 13–14; Rawson, 175; Grove, "Tang"
  6. ^ Watt and Ford, 7; Rawson, 175
  7. ^ Kuwayama, 13–14
  8. ^ Watt and Ford, 26–27, 46–61, 60 for the use of green; Rawson, 178; Grove, "Song"; Kuwayama, 13–17 on the Song
  9. ^ Watt and Ford, 29
  10. ^ Watt and Ford, 29, 105; Garner (1966), throughout
  11. ^ Grove, "Ming"
  12. ^ Watt and Ford, 30, 32–33, 86, examples at 62–113; Rawson, 178
  13. ^ See: Rawson, Jessica, Chinese Ornament: The Lotus and the Dragon, 1984, British Museum Publications, ISBN 0714114316, on the whole subject, especially Chapter 3 on animals, and pp. 99–107.
  14. ^ Watt and Ford, 8–10, 27
  15. ^ Watt and Ford, 27, 74, 76
  16. ^ Watt and Ford, 28
  17. ^ Watt and Ford, 49–50
  18. ^ Watt and Ford, 28 (quoted); Grove
  19. ^ Watt and Ford, 28, 54–55, 68–69; Grove is more confident
  20. ^ Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 267; Watt and Ford, 30–31 (30 quoted)
  21. ^ Grove, "Qing and after (from 1644)"; Map in Watt and Ford, 5
  22. ^ Watt and Ford, 86
  23. ^ Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 101
  24. ^ Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 107
  25. ^ Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 101
  26. ^ Watt and Ford, 32
  27. ^ Watt and Ford, 31–32
  28. ^ Watt and Ford, 104
  29. ^ Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 107; Watt and Ford, 86; "Summary" and "More information" on the V&A page on the table (use the tabs); see Garner (1966), 184–185 on yellow backgrounds
  30. ^ Watt and Ford, 92
  31. ^ Watt and Ford, 81–82
  32. ^ Watt and Ford, 105
  33. ^ "Cinnabar polychrome carved lacquer dish, Yuan dynasty, 14th century, China", A&J Speelman
  34. ^ Watt and Ford, 34, 95
  35. ^ Osborne 525
  36. ^ Watt and Ford, 18
  37. ^ Watt and Ford, 9
  38. ^ Christie's, see Lot Essays: A RARE PAIR OF LARGE CARVED FOUR-COLOR LACQUER CIRCULAR BOXES AND COVERS, Lot 591, Sale 2269, "Fine Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art Including Jades from the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco", 19 March 2009, New York; A VERY RARE IMPERIAL CARVED THREE-COLOUR LACQUER FLORAL-SHAPED BOX AND COVER, Lot 1667, Sale 2389, "Important Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art", 27 November 2007, Hong Kong.
  39. ^ Grove
  40. ^ Watt and Ford, 37; Grove
  41. ^ Burmester, 178
  42. ^ Burmester, 175; "The conservation of Oriental lacquer", V&A Conservation Journal; Cinnabar
  43. ^ Burmester, 176–177; Garner (1963), 90–92
  44. ^ Garner (1963), 93–96
  45. ^ Burmester, 178; Garner (1963), 90
  46. ^ Watt and Ford, 62–63, 70
  47. ^ Garner (1963), 87, 96–97
  48. ^ Watt and Ford, 7
  49. ^ Rawson, 175 ("each coat taking weeks to dry and harden thoroughly")
  50. ^ Garner (1963), 88
  51. ^ Watt and Ford, 7
  52. ^ Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 101 ("up to twenty-four hours"); Grove
  53. ^ Burmester, 176
  54. ^ Watt and Ford, 7; Rawson, 176 ("Chinese lacquer usually consists of hundreds of layers"); Grove ("Carved lacquerware of the early Ming had well over 100 layers of extremely thin lacquer, sometimes less than 0.05 mm thick.); Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 101 ("some of the palace items having up to one hundred layers"), repeated 107, specifically referring to the V&A table; Garner (1963), 88 ("may exceed one hundred")
  55. ^ Webb, 43 google books; see Garner (1963), 92–96 on the study of the layers under a microscope
  56. ^ Watt and Ford, 179 (Japan)
  57. ^ Webb, 43; Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 101
  58. ^ Today, there are probably less than 20 people who are still living with the lacquer carving skill. Probably less than 4 people who can really pass the skill to next generation. (到今天,仍以雕漆工艺谋生的艺人大概不会超过20人,真正能把这门技艺传承下去的大概不会超过三四人。)Zhong, Heyan (2008-01-28). "盛世漆艺" [Lacquer Art in the Flourishing Age]. Life Week (三联生活周刊) (in Chinese (China)). Beijing: SDX Joint Publishing Company (三联书店出版社). Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  59. ^ 雕漆技艺 No.400 VIII—50. Notification of publishing the list of tier one Chinese intangible cultural heritage, Government of China, 20 May 2006, Retrieved on 25 May 2017.
  60. ^ Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 101
  61. ^ Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 101; Watt and Ford, 149
  62. ^ Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 102
  63. ^ Watt and Ford, 86; Rawson, 176; Clunas and Harrison-Hall, 267
  64. ^ Watt and Ford, 46–47, 89
  65. ^ Rawski and Rawson, 303, 449
  66. ^ Watt and Ford, 102
  67. ^ Clunas 2, 57–69
  68. ^ Kerr, 158

References

  • Burmester, A., "Technical Studies of Chinese Lacquer", in N. S. Brommelle, Perry Smith (eds), Urushi: Proceedings of the Urushi Study Group, June 10–27, 1985, Tokyo, 1988, Getty Publications, ISBN 0892360968, 9780892360963, fully online
  • "Cinnabar": Cinnabar: The Chinese Art of Carved Lacquer, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2009 (exhibition)
  • Clunas, Craig, Pictures and Visuality in Early Modern China, 1997, Reaktion Books, ISBN 1861890087, 9781861890085, google books
  • Clunas, Craig and Harrison-Hall, Jessica, Ming: 50 years that changed China, 2014, British Museum Press, ISBN 9780714124841
  • Garner, Harry (1963), "Technical Studies of Oriental Lacquer", Studies in Conservation, vol. 8, no. 3, 1963, pp. 84–98. JSTOR
  • Garner, Harry (1966), "Diaper Backgrounds on Chinese Carved Lacquer", Ars Orientalis, vol. 6, 1966, pp. 165–189. JSTOR
  • "Grove" Oxford Art Online, "China, X, Lacquer" (by Rosemary Scott and others), Subscription required
  • Kerr, Rose, ed., Chinese Art and Design: the T.T. Tsui Gallery of Chinese Art, 1991, Victoria and Albert Museum, ISBN 1851770178
  • Kuwayama, George, "Chinese Guri Lacquers" in N. S. Brommelle, Perry Smith (eds), Urushi: Proceedings of the Urushi Study Group, June 10–27, 1985, Tokyo, 1988, Getty Publications, ISBN 0892360968, 9780892360963, fully online
  • Osborne, Harold (ed), The Oxford Companion to the Decorative Arts, 1975, OUP, ISBN 0198661134
  • Rawski, Evelyn S., Rawson, Jessica, China: The Three Emperors 1662–1795, 2005, Royal Academy of Arts, ISBN 1903973708
  • Rawson, Jessica (ed). The British Museum Book of Chinese Art, 2007 (2nd edn), British Museum Press, ISBN 9780714124469
  • Watt, James C. Y., Ford, Barbara Brennan, East Asian Lacquer: The Florence and Herbert Irving Collection, 1991, Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), ISBN 0870996223, 9780870996221, fully online
  • Webb, Marianne, Lacquer: Technology and Conservation : a Comprehensive Guide to the Technology and Conservation of Asian and European Lacquer, 2000, Butterworth-Heinemann, ISBN 0750644125, 9780750644129

Further reading

(For fuller bibliographies see Grove or Watt and Ford)

  • Clifford, Derek, Chinese Carved Lacquer, 1993
  • Garner, Harry, Chinese Lacquer, 1979, Faber and Faber
  • Krahl, Regina, Morgan, Brian, From Innovation to Conformity: Chinese Lacquer From the 13th to 16th Centuries, 1989, Bluitt, London

External links

  • The Luxury of Chinese Lacquer, Littleton & Hennessy Asian Art, 48 page PDF

carved, lacquer, qidiao, chinese, 漆雕, distinctive, chinese, form, decorated, lacquerware, while, lacquer, been, used, china, least, years, technique, carving, into, very, thick, coatings, appears, have, been, developed, 12th, century, extremely, time, consumin. Carved lacquer or Qidiao Chinese 漆雕 is a distinctive Chinese form of decorated lacquerware While lacquer has been used in China for at least 3 000 years 1 the technique of carving into very thick coatings of it appears to have been developed in the 12th century CE It is extremely time consuming to produce and has always been a luxury product essentially restricted to China 2 though imitated in Japanese lacquer in somewhat different styles The producing process is called Diaoqi 雕漆 carving lacquer Box with the character for Spring 春 Qianlong period Qing dynasty Nanjing Museum Changfang Pan rectangular tray with Sword Pommel Pattern black with red layers Middle Ming about 1450 1550 Though most surviving examples are from the Ming and Qing dynasties the main types of subject matter for the carvings were all begun under the Song dynasty and the development of both these and the technique of carving were essentially over by the early Ming These types were the abstract guri or Sword Pommel pattern figures in a landscape and birds and plants To these some designs with religious symbols animals auspicious characters right and imperial dragons can be added 3 Tuoyuan pan oval tray with people in a landscape 24 5 cm wide Yuan The objects made in the technique are a wide range of small types but are mostly practical vessels or containers such as boxes plates and trays Some screens and pieces of Chinese furniture were made Carved lacquer is only rarely combined with painting in lacquer and other lacquer techniques 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Song dynasty and the main types of subject matter 1 1 1 Guri pattern and tixi technique 1 2 Yuan 1 2 1 Bird and plant designs 1 3 Ming 1 3 1 Landscape and figure designs 1 4 Qing 2 Manufacturing process 3 Uses 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory EditLater Chinese writers dated the introduction of carved lacquer to the Tang dynasty 618 906 and many modern writers have pointed to some late Tang pieces of armour found on the Silk Road by Aurel Stein and now in the British Museum These are red and black lacquer on camel hide but the lacquer is very thin less than one millimeter in thickness and the effect very different with simple abstract shapes on a plain field and almost no impression of relief 5 Song dynasty and the main types of subject matter Edit Foliated dish or tray in the tixi technique with the guri or Sword Pommel Pattern here using red with three thin layers of black The polished top layer of red contrasts with the duller bottom layer Early Ming The style of carving into thick lacquer used later is first seen in the Southern Song 1127 1279 following the development of techniques for making very thick lacquer 6 There is some evidence from literary sources that it had existed in the late Tang 7 At first the style of decoration used is known as guri 屈輪 from the Japanese word for the ring pommel of a sword where the same motifs were used in metal and is often called the Sword Pommel pattern in English This style uses a family of repeated two branched scrolling shapes cut with a rounded profile at the surface but below that a V section through layers of lacquer in different colours black red and yellow and later green giving a marbled effect from the contrasted colours this technique is called tixi 剔犀 in Chinese This style continued to be used up to the Ming dynasty especially on small boxes and jars with covers though after the Song only red was often used and the motifs were often carved with wider flat spaces at the bottom level to be exposed 8 Most Song carved lacquer to survive is in the guri and tixi style and technique 9 but the period also saw the development of a pictorial style and the beginning of the two other main streams of iconography that were to dominate the rest of the history of carved lacquer though surviving examples from the Song are rare Both relate to Chinese art in other media and use the existing vocabulary of Chinese ornament for borders The first type of subject is scenes of people in a landscape derived mainly from Chinese painting and woodcut book illustrations such scenes were only later to be found in Chinese ceramics The settings quickly became fairly standardized with a few figures close to one or more buildings in a garden setting perhaps near water or a road the English chinoiserie Willow pattern is just such a scene A convention developed by which the areas of sky water and land floor or ground left largely blank in paintings are filled in with discreet patterns derived from textiles known as brocade grounds and also diaper backgrounds this convention has continued to modern times Standard groups of patterns for each type are followed in work from the imperial workshops but may be mixed up in work from the commercial workshops The precise form of patterns used can be a factor in dating pieces 10 but in general The background diaper of sky consisted of looping clouds diapers representing water were cut in rhomboid curves for waves and the land and paving had diapers with geometricized flowers 11 The other main type of subject was birds against a foliage background that filled the whole carved area or just flowers and foliage treated in the same way Dragons and phoenixes were also treated in this style and became very prominent in Ming imperial works see below A design of this type known as the two birds was especially successful aesthetically and often used in later examples the birds are often the fenghuang or Chinese phoenix The style continued to develop until reaching its finest period in the early Ming dynasty and has continued to be produced Plant decoration of this sort was later generally used to fill in borders and other spaces around other types of subject such as the edges and legs of furniture 12 This style relates to a broad tradition of Chinese ornament reaching back into Chinese antiquity in stone reliefs metalwork and other media including ceramics 13 Lacquer was among the luxury products often given by the emperor as diplomatic or political gifts or to the subsidiary courts of princes of the imperial house Japanese collections often accumulated in temples have a high proportion of the surviving early Chinese carved lacquer pieces 14 The Engaku ji temple in Kamakura has an especially important group of pieces some of which are credibly reputed to have been brought to Japan by its founder a refugee monk escaping the fall of the Song dynasty to the Mongols in 1279 15 Guri pattern and tixi technique Edit Bei Cup with guri Sword Pommel Pattern in tixi with silver interior Song or Yuan Straight sides to grooves and several thin layers of red Pan Dish with Sword Pommel Pattern Yuan Brown with red layers Tuozhan Cup Stand in the Form of a Lotus Blossom with Sword Pommel Pattern early Ming Very rounded carving and a few black layers Foliated Pan Dish with Sword Pommel Pattern detail of the tray and layers of different colours can be seen above Yuan Edit Dish with roses Yuan dynasty 16 cm across In the Yuan dynasty the development of Song styles continued especially from about 1320 after something of a hiatus as also seen in other arts 16 Pieces in the Sword Pommel pattern have more rounded tops to the ridges and more narrow bottoms 17 The artistic quality of carving was perhaps never higher in all the main streams of iconography Sword Pommel pattern birds flowers and foliage and figures in landscapes In the crowded exuberant and complex designs with birds and plants the forms overlap and curl in a more sculptural fashion allowed by slightly thicker lacquer 18 By the late Yuan the reputation of individual masters has come down to us although few pieces are signed and even these cannot be very confidently assigned to an artist as the signatures may not be genuine Yang Mao and Zhang Cheng were the most famous masters both from Jiaxing in the southern province of Zhejiang 19 Bird and plant designs Edit Box with Camellias Song Tray with two birds against a background of plum blossom and flowers 19 cm wide late Song 13th century oblique view No overlapping of forms and relatively wide strips of background visible Yinni He Seal Paste Box with Litchi Stems 7 5 cm wide Middle Ming 1450 1500 Brocade ground patterns are used both for the background and on the fruit He Box with Pair of Pheasants in Peonies late Ming 19 cm wide Thin top layers of red over black give effective contrasts Ming Edit Ming Wanli period tray with frontal dragon against a background of clouds with a floral border Red over rather faded buff yellow lacquer Chinese diplomatic gifts to the Japanese government in the early Ming are especially well documented on the Japanese side at a time when the Ashikaga shogunate was enjoying a period of improved relations with China In 1403 a consignment of luxury goods also including Chinese silks and lacquered Chinese furniture had 58 pieces of carved red lacquerware in a range of shapes Lists with descriptions and measurements that allow some surviving pieces to be identified also survive from 1406 1407 1433 and 1434 These confirm that carved red lacquer was already the favored type of lacquer for court use by this point 20 Most early production of lacquer had been in the more suitable hot and moist climate of the south 21 but from the early Ming onwards the finest work was often from official workshops in Beijing and the best early Ming work is technically as near perfection as has ever been possible 22 The Orchard Factory was founded around 1416 in Lingjing hutong in Beijing near the Forbidden City It used imported workers from the south the masters from Jiaxing in Zhejiang province and other workers from Yunnan and Sichuan 23 As part of the internal tax or tribute system about 5 000 workers from the south were required to work in the imperial workshops for terms of four years 24 The raw lacquer was also imported from the south as the Chinese lacquer tree will not grow as far north as Beijing But the Orchard Factory closed in 1436 after only some 20 years of operations 25 The production of imperial wares seems to have lapsed between 1436 and 1522 after another Mongol invasion from which lacquer production took longer to recover than Jingdezhen porcelain 26 The Ming table in the Victoria and Albert Museum 1425 1436 In the Ming period the dragon became a key imperial symbol very often appearing on lacquer from the imperial workshops for the use of the court or made to be given by the emperor 27 Initially the dragon s head was seen in the traditional profile but in the middle of the 15th century the frontal dragon seen looking out full face at the viewer was introduced and soon became the norm in lacquer as in other media 28 By at least the Ming dynasty carved lacquer was being used all over the visible surfaces of pieces of furniture a dauntingly expensive proposition One of the best known pieces is a desk sized table with three drawers in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London whose top has a typical imperial Ming design with a central dragon and phoenix symbolizing the emperor and empress respectively The table top measures 119 5 cm by 84 5 cm and it was produced between 1425 and 1436 in the Orchard Factory and is the only piece of its size to survive from their production the best period of Ming workmanship As with many other pieces the ground of the relief was originally a yellow that contrasted with the red of the upper layers but has now faded to a dark colour 29 Black grounds under red carved layers were also common from this period but in some cases what now appears black may originally have been green 30 A less common type often of very high quality has black upper layers on a red ground 31 From about 1400 the brocade ground patterns already used for floors and sky in scenes of figures in a landscape were also used in depicting plant designs both on the backgrounds and on the leaves or fruits of the plants themselves a curious development More logically they were also used for the background of non representational designs such as characters of Chinese script 32 Though sometimes used earlier 33 polychrome carved lacquer in a variety of the tixi technique was only prominent during the period between the Jiajing Emperor and Wanli Emperor 1521 1620 This involved carving different parts of the image down to expose a layer in a different colour so building up a coloured image 34 Landscape and figure designs Edit The palace of Chang e goddess of the moon in black over red 1490s Pan Dish with Children Playing in a Garden a popular subject Ming Yongle Qing fruit box with typical genre scene He Small Box with Elderly Woman and Young Boy Tending Bamboo in a Garden Qing Qianlong Note the three kinds of brocade ground Qing Edit Detail of 18th century snuff bottle with Children at Play and three types of diaper background for ground water and sky The top layers are worn from use Another imperial factory was founded beside the Forbidden City in 1680 under the Qing dynasty by the Kangxi Emperor and was still producing under the Qianlong Emperor 1736 95 35 one of the most prodigal spenders in Chinese history and a great lover of carved lacquer Referring to the traditional complaints stretching back to the Han dynasty 36 about the cost to the imperial budget of ordinary lacquerware he had a carved Ming piece in the imperial collection engraved with an inscription beginning Lacquer is cause for ten officials to complain what if it is also carved 37 A pair of vases late Qing dynasty Adilnor Collection Sweden By the Qing period the repertoire of subjects for carved lacquer was essentially complete but one addition in the Qianlong reign was a few pieces showing foreigners mostly Central Asians bearing tribute though landscapes 38 Combination techniques of other techniques sometimes included carving but more often slightly raised areas built up by applying fillers to the base surface before the lacquer was applied 39 After the death of the Qianlong Emperor both the quality and quantity of imperial production sharply declined and has never reached the previous standard again 40 Manufacturing process Edit He box with a Scholar and Attendants in a Garden Early Ming About halfway up a horizon can be seen as the diaper background pattern changes from water to sky Two birds tray in black lacquer Yuan 1260 1368 The lacquer sap from the Toxicodendron vernicifluum lacquer tree that is native to China is mixed with colourings with the usual colours being red from cinnabar by far the most common black from carbon probably Chinese ink and soot 41 and a yellow or buff from orpiment 42 which is liable to fade to a dark colour and is often now hardly apparent There appears to have been a change in the early Ming from using red from natural mineral cinnabar to synthetic vermilion 43 Some time after this the colouring of the red changed from the previous brownish red shade to a bright scarlet for reasons that remain unclear 44 The chemistry of other common pigments known to the Chinese at this period appears to have made them unsuitable for use in lacquer 45 The base is usually of wood though other materials may be used Often the base of flatter pieces is made of two pieces of wood glued one on top of the other with their grains running at right angles to each other This helps the finished piece withstand stresses from different directions Nonetheless early pieces often show some warping and cracking 46 The wood was often covered with a glued on coarse cloth made from ramie or hemp before the lacquer was applied 47 The base is coated with a succession of coats or layers of lacquer each of which must be allowed to dry and harden slowly in a warm temperature of 70 to 80 F 21 to 27 C with high humidity 75 to 85 before the next is applied 48 The drying time for each coat has been said to take weeks 49 several days 50 48 hours 51 or a day 52 It has been noted that there is a great diversity in the literature about the numbers of layers involved Estimates vary between a few and over 300 53 It is often stated that the number of coats in the best quality pieces reaches into the low hundreds 54 though it has also been said that microscopic examination of pieces does not support such high numbers 55 The lacquer is then carved with knives and other metal tools Usually the general large areas of the composition were carved down to the right level first then the main forms followed by the details and lastly the patterns in the backgrounds Finally any polishing needed is done the best pieces had also been polished after each coat was hard Modern works often use a number of shortcuts including starting with carving most of the design in relief on the base wood so greatly reducing the depth of actual lacquer required this has been also been done in the Japanese kamakura bori technique since around the 15th century 56 Additives are also added in large amounts to the lacquer or cast resin or other materials used instead 57 Nowadays there are less than 20 diaoqi masters who can still perform the craft 58 Because of its endangered status it has been listed as a Chinese intangible cultural heritage 59 Uses EditLacquerware has been described as not unlike modern plastic in that it is light durable and clean 60 Other types of lacquerware were widely used as tablewares but the pictorial style of carved lacquer is less suitable for this with intricate sunk corners that would be hard to clean of wet food remains Partly for this reason wide flattish shapes that are called dishes in other media such as ceramics tend to be rather more flat and to be called trays when in lacquer Nonetheless there is evidence that carved lacquer was used for serving food Ming paintings of court scenes show food for imperial picnics being carried by court eunuchs in round lidded boxes in carved lacquer a common shape that can reach nearly 40 cm across 61 The interior of these is almost always plain lacquer greatly reducing the problem of keeping them clean and the food itself may have been wrapped or in ceramic containers A Yongle reign dish or tray 35 cm wide probably made at the Orchard Factory and now in the British Museum has a rare inscription indicating the use of the piece as it declares it the property of the Imperial Household Department of Sweetmeats and Delicacies 62 Lacquer was more often used for cup stands or bowl stands a sort of saucer with an integral raised hollow tube at the centre to hold the cup 63 than actual cups but sometimes the exterior of these is carved lacquer especially in the guri style while the interior lacquer is smooth As in other materials there is a considerable overlap between the pieces used for serving and drinking tea wine and other drinks Items for the scholar s desk including brush pens with their matching covers 64 were often made in carved lacquer as were those for the male and female toilet The Studio of the Three Rarities the Qianlong Emperor s study in his main Beijing apartments had an elaborate writing set in carved lacquer and other materials including some of the visual tricks he enjoyed such as a lacquer and ivory book that was actually a box containing his rhyming dictionary 65 Many smaller round boxes are described in the literature as incense boxes and a type of late Ming rectangular box with rounded corners was apparently mainly or initially used for the ceremonial presentation of documents or gifts 66 Craig Clunas suggests that in looking at pictorial scenes we should be alert to possible connections in what may seem general genre scenes to specific major life events as such pieces were used and reused among the elite to carry and themselves to be gifts on such occasions as a marriage birth of a child birthday passing the imperial examinations moving house promotion and retirement Specific episodes from the history of famous literati or literature may be intended in paintings such subjects are likely to be made clear by inscriptions but not on lacquer 67 In addition to presentation pieces boxes in all types of lacquer were used in elite society as containers to send gifts of food where the recipient was intended after admiring the container to send it back containing another gift 68 Bi Writing brush and cap with Carp and Dragon Middle Ming Box with four tiers 15th century Ruyi sceptre of office with Deer Cranes and a Bat and a swastika background pattern Qing Table and chair set QingNotes Edit Grove Grove Cinnabar Grove Watt and Ford 3 Watt and Ford 6 7 7 quoted British Museum collection database see Curator s comments Kuwayama 13 14 Rawson 175 Grove Tang Watt and Ford 7 Rawson 175 Kuwayama 13 14 Watt and Ford 26 27 46 61 60 for the use of green Rawson 178 Grove Song Kuwayama 13 17 on the Song Watt and Ford 29 Watt and Ford 29 105 Garner 1966 throughout Grove Ming Watt and Ford 30 32 33 86 examples at 62 113 Rawson 178 See Rawson Jessica Chinese Ornament The Lotus and the Dragon 1984 British Museum Publications ISBN 0714114316 on the whole subject especially Chapter 3 on animals and pp 99 107 Watt and Ford 8 10 27 Watt and Ford 27 74 76 Watt and Ford 28 Watt and Ford 49 50 Watt and Ford 28 quoted Grove Watt and Ford 28 54 55 68 69 Grove is more confident Clunas and Harrison Hall 267 Watt and Ford 30 31 30 quoted Grove Qing and after from 1644 Map in Watt and Ford 5 Watt and Ford 86 Clunas and Harrison Hall 101 Clunas and Harrison Hall 107 Clunas and Harrison Hall 101 Watt and Ford 32 Watt and Ford 31 32 Watt and Ford 104 Clunas and Harrison Hall 107 Watt and Ford 86 Summary and More information on the V amp A page on the table use the tabs see Garner 1966 184 185 on yellow backgrounds Watt and Ford 92 Watt and Ford 81 82 Watt and Ford 105 Cinnabar polychrome carved lacquer dish Yuan dynasty 14th century China A amp J Speelman Watt and Ford 34 95 Osborne 525 Watt and Ford 18 Watt and Ford 9 Christie s see Lot Essays A RARE PAIR OF LARGE CARVED FOUR COLOR LACQUER CIRCULAR BOXES AND COVERS Lot 591 Sale 2269 Fine Chinese Ceramics amp Works of Art Including Jades from the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco 19 March 2009 New York A VERY RARE IMPERIAL CARVED THREE COLOUR LACQUER FLORAL SHAPED BOX AND COVER Lot 1667 Sale 2389 Important Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art 27 November 2007 Hong Kong Grove Watt and Ford 37 Grove Burmester 178 Burmester 175 The conservation of Oriental lacquer V amp A Conservation Journal Cinnabar Burmester 176 177 Garner 1963 90 92 Garner 1963 93 96 Burmester 178 Garner 1963 90 Watt and Ford 62 63 70 Garner 1963 87 96 97 Watt and Ford 7 Rawson 175 each coat taking weeks to dry and harden thoroughly Garner 1963 88 Watt and Ford 7 Clunas and Harrison Hall 101 up to twenty four hours Grove Burmester 176 Watt and Ford 7 Rawson 176 Chinese lacquer usually consists of hundreds of layers Grove Carved lacquerware of the early Ming had well over 100 layers of extremely thin lacquer sometimes less than 0 05 mm thick Clunas and Harrison Hall 101 some of the palace items having up to one hundred layers repeated 107 specifically referring to the V amp A table Garner 1963 88 may exceed one hundred Webb 43 google books see Garner 1963 92 96 on the study of the layers under a microscope Watt and Ford 179 Japan Webb 43 Clunas and Harrison Hall 101 Today there are probably less than 20 people who are still living with the lacquer carving skill Probably less than 4 people who can really pass the skill to next generation 到今天 仍以雕漆工艺谋生的艺人大概不会超过20人 真正能把这门技艺传承下去的大概不会超过三四人 Zhong Heyan 2008 01 28 盛世漆艺 Lacquer Art in the Flourishing Age Life Week 三联生活周刊 in Chinese China Beijing SDX Joint Publishing Company 三联书店出版社 Retrieved 25 May 2017 雕漆技艺 No 400 VIII 50 Notification of publishing the list of tier one Chinese intangible cultural heritage Government of China 20 May 2006 Retrieved on 25 May 2017 Clunas and Harrison Hall 101 Clunas and Harrison Hall 101 Watt and Ford 149 Clunas and Harrison Hall 102 Watt and Ford 86 Rawson 176 Clunas and Harrison Hall 267 Watt and Ford 46 47 89 Rawski and Rawson 303 449 Watt and Ford 102 Clunas 2 57 69 Kerr 158References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carved lacquer from China Burmester A Technical Studies of Chinese Lacquer in N S Brommelle Perry Smith eds Urushi Proceedings of the Urushi Study Group June 10 27 1985 Tokyo 1988 Getty Publications ISBN 0892360968 9780892360963 fully online Cinnabar Cinnabar The Chinese Art of Carved Lacquer The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York 2009 exhibition Clunas Craig Pictures and Visuality in Early Modern China 1997 Reaktion Books ISBN 1861890087 9781861890085 google books Clunas Craig and Harrison Hall Jessica Ming 50 years that changed China 2014 British Museum Press ISBN 9780714124841 Garner Harry 1963 Technical Studies of Oriental Lacquer Studies in Conservation vol 8 no 3 1963 pp 84 98 JSTOR Garner Harry 1966 Diaper Backgrounds on Chinese Carved Lacquer Ars Orientalis vol 6 1966 pp 165 189 JSTOR Grove Oxford Art Online China X Lacquer by Rosemary Scott and others Subscription required Kerr Rose ed Chinese Art and Design the T T Tsui Gallery of Chinese Art 1991 Victoria and Albert Museum ISBN 1851770178 Kuwayama George Chinese Guri Lacquers in N S Brommelle Perry Smith eds Urushi Proceedings of the Urushi Study Group June 10 27 1985 Tokyo 1988 Getty Publications ISBN 0892360968 9780892360963 fully online Osborne Harold ed The Oxford Companion to the Decorative Arts 1975 OUP ISBN 0198661134 Rawski Evelyn S Rawson Jessica China The Three Emperors 1662 1795 2005 Royal Academy of Arts ISBN 1903973708 Rawson Jessica ed The British Museum Book of Chinese Art 2007 2nd edn British Museum Press ISBN 9780714124469 Watt James C Y Ford Barbara Brennan East Asian Lacquer The Florence and Herbert Irving Collection 1991 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York ISBN 0870996223 9780870996221 fully online Webb Marianne Lacquer Technology and Conservation a Comprehensive Guide to the Technology and Conservation of Asian and European Lacquer 2000 Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 0750644125 9780750644129Further reading Edit For fuller bibliographies see Grove or Watt and Ford Clifford Derek Chinese Carved Lacquer 1993 Garner Harry Chinese Lacquer 1979 Faber and Faber Krahl Regina Morgan Brian From Innovation to Conformity Chinese Lacquer From the 13th to 16th Centuries 1989 Bluitt LondonExternal links EditThe Luxury of Chinese Lacquer Littleton amp Hennessy Asian Art 48 page PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Carved lacquer amp oldid 1124236294, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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