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Japanese lacquerware

Lacquerware (漆器, shikki) is a Japanese craft with a wide range of fine and decorative arts, as lacquer has been used in urushi-e, prints, and on a wide variety of objects from Buddha statues to bento boxes for food.

Writing lacquer box with Irises at Yatsuhashi, by Ogata Kōrin, Edo period (National Treasure)
Inro in maki-e lacquer, Edo period, 18th century

The characteristic of Japanese lacquerware is the diversity of lacquerware using a decoration technique called maki-e (蒔絵) in which metal powder is sprinkled to attach to lacquer. The invention of various maki-e techniques in Japanese history expanded artistic expression, and various tools and works of art such as inro are highly decorative.[1]

A number of terms are used in Japanese to refer to lacquerware. Shikki (漆器) means "lacquer ware" in the most literal sense, while nurimono (塗物) means "coated things", and urushi-nuri (漆塗) means "lacquer coating."[2]

The terms related to lacquer or lacquerware such as "Japanning", "Urushiol" and "maque" which means lacquer in Mexican Spanish, are derived from Japanese lacquerware.[3][4]

History edit

Jōmon-Edo period edit

 
Detailed view of a lacquer panel of the Tamamushi Shrine from the Asuka period, 7th century (National Treasure)
 
Tebako (Cosmetic box) Design of wheels-in-stream in maki-e lacquer and mother-of-pearl inlay, Heian period, 12th century, National Treasure
 
A Japanese lacquerware produced and exported at the request of the Society of Jesus. Azuchi–Momoyama period, 16th century, Kyushu National Museum
 
Maki-e sake bottle with Tokugawa clan's mon (emblem), Edo period, 18th century

It has been confirmed that the lacquer tree existed in Japan from 12,600 years ago in the incipient Jōmon period. This was confirmed by radioactive carbon dating of the lacquer tree found at the Torihama shell mound, and is the oldest lacquer tree in the world found as of 2011.[5] Lacquer was used in Japan as early as 7000 BCE, during the Jōmon period. Evidence for the earliest lacquerware was discovered at the Kakinoshima "B" Excavation Site in Hokkaido. The ornaments woven with lacquered red thread were discovered in a pit grave dating from the first half of the Initial Jōmon period. Also, at Kakinoshima "A" Excavation Site, earthenware with a spout painted with vermilion lacquer, which was made 3200 years ago, was found almost completely intact.[6][7][5]

Lacquering technology may have been invented by the Jōmon. They learned to refine urushi (poison oak sap) – the process taking several months. Iron oxide (colcothar) and cinnabar (mercury sulfide) were used for producing red lacquer.[8] Lacquer was used both on pottery, and on different types of wooden items. In some cases, burial clothes for the dead were also lacquered.[8] Many lacquered objects have turned up during the Early Jōmon period; this indicates that this was an established part of Jōmon culture.[8] Experts are divided on whether Jōmon lacquer was derived from Chinese techniques, or invented independently. For example, Mark Hudson believes that "Jomon lacquer technology was developed independently in Japan rather than being introduced from China as once believed".[9][8]

One of the masterpieces of ancient Japanese lacquer objects is the Tamamushi Shrine from middle of the seventh century AD. The shrine is made of lacquered hinoki or Japanese cypress and camphor wood, both native species. While commonly referred to as urushi, since the Meiji period some scholars have argued instead that the paintings employ the technique known as mitsuda-e, an early type of oil painting, using perilla (shiso) oil with litharge as a desiccant.

Many traditional crafts and industrial arts produced throughout Japanese history were initially influenced by China, and afterward experienced various native stylistic influences and innovations over the centuries.

In the Heian period (794-1185), various maki-e techniques characteristic of Japanese lacquerware were developed. While the method of drawing designs with a brush by dissolving gold powder in lacquer is a common technique in other countries, the method of drawing designs with lacquer and then sprinkling gold, silver, or copper powder of various sizes and shapes on top to polish them was developed in Japan. This made it possible to make the gold and silver of lacquerware brighter than before.[1] Togidashi maki-e, a kind of maki-e, was developed and completed in this period.[10] And hira maki-e was developed in the latter half of this period.[11]

In the Kamakura period (1185–1333), carved lacquer from the Song Dynasty of China was imported to Japan. However, many Japanese lacquer craftsmen did not adopt the Chinese method of depositing lacquer and then carving it; instead, they created Kamakurabori, a method of carving wood and then coating lacquer.[12] During this period, Hira maki-e was completed and taka maki-e was newly developed.[11][13]

In the Muromachi period (1336–1573), shishiai-togidashi maki-e, the most complicated of the typical maki-e techniques, was developed, as well as new taka maki-e techniques using grinding stones and clay powders.[14][13][15][16] Japanese lacquerware was abundantly exported to neighboring East Asia, Southeast Asia and even India. Lacquer (particularly Japanese) was known at Indian courts and featured among the gifts offered by Europeans to local rulers. Japanese lacquer was well known to Sir Thomas Roe, for example, as a suitable type of gift to the emperor Jahangir, and he notes in 1616 that rarities from China and Japan were highly desirable in India.[17][18][15]

In China, the Ming and Qing rulers generally described Japanese lacquerwares as "foreign lacquer" (yangqi). Yang Ming, and famous lacquer man Zhejiang, made annotations for A Record of Decoration with Lacquer, ... People of the Ming Dynasty once recorded: “The decoration art with lacquer coated with gold originated (maki-e) from Japan". Yang in the reign of Xuande of the Ming dynasty made a trip to Japan to study Japanese techniques, and a Japanese visited a Chinese imperial workshop in Beijing during the Ming dynasty. It is well documented that the Yongzheng Emperor had a formidable interest in Japanese lacquer, yangqi, and this was reflected in many of the works produced in the Imperial workshops during his reign.[19][20][21][22][23]

In the Azuchi-Momoyama period (1568-1600) also made its way into Colonial Mexico (Manila Galleons) and Europe by Nanban trade. Japanese lacquerware attracted European aristocrats and missionaries from Europe, and western style chests and church furniture were exported in response to their requests.[24][25] In this period, hira maki-e became very popular because of mass production.[11]

The Edo period (1603–1868) saw an increase in the focused cultivation of lacquer trees and the development of the techniques used. In the 18th century colored lacquers came into wider use. With the development of economy and culture, the artistic quality of lacquered furniture has improved. Hon'ami Kōetsu and Ogata Kōrin brought the designs of the Rinpa school of painting into lacquerware. From the middle of the Edo period, Inro became popular as men's accessories, and wealthy merchants of the chōnin class and samurai class collected inro of high aesthetic value, precisely designed with lacquer.[26][27] Marie Antoinette and Maria Theresa are known collectors of Japanese lacquerware and their collections are now often exhibited in the Louvre and the Palace of Versailles.[1] During this period, due to the development of the economy, shishiai-togidashi maki-e, an advanced technique, became popular.[14]

The Meiji era edit

 
Maki-e Fuji Tagonoura, by Shibata Zeshin, Meiji period, 1872
 
Maki-e Writing-table, by Shirayama Shosai, Meiji period, 19th century, Khalili Collection of Japanese Art

Early nineteenth-century economic hardship decreased the demand for gold- or silver-decorated lacquerwares.[28] The Meiji era saw a renewed interest in lacquer as artists developed new designs and experimented with new textures and finishes. Foremost among these was Shibata Zeshin,[28] who has been called "Japan's greatest lacquerer".[29] The appeal of his highly original style was in the choice of motifs and subject matter rather than embedded gold and silver. He placed lacquer panels in frames, imitating Western oil paintings.[30] Other notable lacquer artists of the 19th century include Nakayama Komin and Shirayama Shosai, both of whom, in contrast with Zeshin, maintained a classical style that owed a lot to Japanese and Chinese landscape art.[31] Maki-e was the most common technique for quality lacquerware in this period.[32]

Shibayama wares invented in the 1770s during the Edo period,[33] combined lacquer, gold, silver, shellfish, ivory, coral, tortoise shell, ceramics and other novel materials in elaborate decorations.[34][35] They get their name from Shibayama Senzo, originally Onogi Senzo, who adopted the name of his hometown on moving to Edo, and whose family produced and exhibited lacquerware in the new style.[36] This style became popular in the Meiji period because it could be produced more quickly and cheaply than traditional lacquers.[30] Somada ware, invented in the 1670s during the Edo period, is characterized by a regular pattern of finely cut shellfish, gold leaf and silver leaf, and became popular during this period.[35] Richly-decorated lacquerwares in original designs were popular domestically, and even more so with Western buyers during this period of European and American fascination with Japanese art.[28] The government took an active interest in the art export market, promoting Japan's lacquers and other decorative arts at a succession of world's fairs.[37][38] Lacquer from Japanese workshops was recognised as technically superior to what could be produced anywhere else in the world.[30]

Twentieth century onwards edit

 
By Living National Treasure Gonroku Matsuda, 1960

After the Meiji era, a new generation of artists further changed the decorative language, depicting plants in a stylised way without naturalistic settings.[39]

In recent decades, there has been effort made by the Japanese government to preserve the art of making lacquerware. Through the process of designating important craftsmen such as Gonroku Matsuda (松田権六) and Kazumi Murose (室瀬和美) as Living National Treasure as well the government's effort to encourage the development of new Urushi workshop, the art is gradually establishing itself once again.

The best lacquer technique from the end of the Edo period to the Meiji period, especially the inro technique, was almost lost in the westernization of Japanese lifestyle. However, in 1985 Tatsuo Kitamura (北村辰夫) set up his own studio called "Unryuan" (雲龍庵) and succeeded in recreating it. His lacquer works are collected in the Victoria and Albert Museum and the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, and are an object of collection for the world's wealthy.[40][41][42][43]

In 2020, the Crafts Gallery of the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, which collects works made by Living National Treasures, moved Kanazawa, Ishikawa Prefecture. This is due to the Japanese government's policy of local revitalization. Kanazawa, which flourished under the Maeda clan in the Edo period, is a city with a thriving traditional industry.

Techniques and processes edit

 
Closeup of the chinkin lacquer method, depicting needles of a pine tree
 
Inro, Design of minute patterns in mother-of-pearl inlay, Somada characterized by a combination of raden and makie techniques, Edo period

As in other countries where lacquerware has traditionally been produced, the process is fundamentally quite basic. An object is formed from wood, sometimes leather, paper, or basketry. Lacquer is applied to seal and protect the object, and then decoration is added. Generally, three coats (undercoat, middle-coat, and final coat) are used, the final coat sometimes being clear rather than black lacquer, in order to allow decorations to show through.

Alongside the red and black lacquers, it is common to see the use of inlay, often seashells or similar materials, as well as mica or other materials. The application of gold powder is known as maki-e, and is a very common decorative element.

A few examples of traditional techniques follow:

  • ikkanbari (一閑張), also known as harinuki (張貫) is one common technique used to make tea wares. Invented by Hiki Ikkan in the early 17th century, the process involves the application of layers of lacquer to paper shaped in a mold.
  • iro-urushi (色漆), literally "color lacquer", was created by adding pigments to clear lacquer. The limits of natural pigments allowed only five colors (red, black, yellow, green and brown) to be used up until the 19th century, when various innovations appeared, along with the later introduction of Western artificial pigments. Shibata Zeshin was a major innovator in this field, using not only color but also other substances mixed in with his lacquer to achieve a wide variety of effects, including the simulated appearance of precious metals, which were heavily restricted from artistic use at the time due to government concerns over excessive extravagance.
  • shunkei-nuri (春慶塗), Shunkei lacquerware; it is created using transparent lacquer on yellow- or red-stained wood, so that the natural wood grain can be seen (similar to 'Kuroye Nuri' in this respect). The name is derived from the inventor who was active in Sakai during the reign of the Emperor Go-Kameyama (1368-1392). This method became popular in the 17th century in Takayama, Hida province. Many articles for use in tea-drinking were manufactured using this technique.[44]
  • urushi-hanga (漆絵版画), developed by Hakuo Iriyama, producing a printing plate from dry lacquer, that was carved and finally used like a block print but instead of traditional printing colors with pigmented lacquer.
  • raden (螺鈿) using inlays of shell and ivory to decorate pieces that usually have a wood base
  • maki-e (蒔絵) using metal powders, including gold, silver, copper and their alloys, spread with bamboo tubes or fine brushes. In hiramaki-e, the powders are sprinkled onto wet lacquer, to be then covered by another layer of lacquer. Takamaki-e achieves a high relief effect by repeated layers, sometimes including the addition of charcoal, sawdust or clay.[45] Togidashi-e involves covering the original maki-e in several layers of lacquer, then polishing down until the design is visible.[46]

Regional forms edit

 
Ewer in negoro style. The red lacquer wears away gradually and irregularly with use, producing the effect of natural aging for which these pieces are highly appreciated.

As with most traditional arts, variations emerged over time as individual centers of production developed their own unique techniques and styles.

  • Aizu wares developed in the late 16th century, and saw a peak in their production in the Meiji period. One Aizu technique is that of etching designs or images into the surface of the lacquer, and then filling in the space with gold or other materials. Other techniques distinctive of Aizu involve the burnishing of various clays and primers in the process.
  • Jōhana wares are generally known for their use of maki-e and mitsuda-e (gold and lead decoration, respectively), and for the use of white or whitish lacquer.
  • Negoro lacquerwares were produced at the Negoro-ji temple complex in Izumi province. The red layers of lacquer on Negoro wares are intended to gradually wear away with use, revealing the black lacquer underneath.[47] This effect has since been copied and emulated elsewhere.
  • Ryukyuan lacquerware, though frequently included among types of Japanese lacquer, actually developed largely independently, with strong influences from China and Southeast Asia, as the Ryukyu Islands did not come under Japanese control until 1609.
  • Tsugaru wares feature a technique supposedly developed by Ikeda Gentarō at the end of the 17th century; multiple layers of different colored lacquers are used to create a colorful mottled effect.
  • Wakasa wares are made using a variety of colors, and the inclusion of eggshells, rice chaff, or other materials in the base coats. Silver or gold foil is used as well, and sealed under a layer of transparent lacquer.
  • Wajima-nuri (輪島塗) can be dated back to late 15th century from Wajima, Ishikawa Prefecture. Wajima-nuri is famous for is its durable undercoating that is achieved by the application of multiple layers of urushi mixed with powdered diatomaceous earth (ji-no-ko) onto delicate zelkova wooden substrates.[48]

National Treasures edit

The government has registered a number of ancient items as National Treasures. Many of them are Buddhist items, dating from the Heian period. See List of National Treasures of Japan (crafts-others).

Collections edit

The Tokugawa Art Museum in Nagoya City, Japan has a lacquer collection including the Edo period maki-e bridal trousseau that was designated a National Treasure.[49][50]

Today, Japanese lacquerware is sought by collectors and museums around the world. Modern collections of Japanese lacquerware outside Japan include the Nasser D. Khalili Collection of Japanese Art which includes works by Shitaba Zeshin and other notable artists. Nasser Khalili has run exhibitions focused on Shibata Zeshin's work in four countries.[51] The Charles A. Greenfield Collection in the United States covers the period from 1600 to 1900.[52] Marie Antoinette's collection of domestic lacquer is split between the Louvre, the Guimet Museum, and the Palace of Versailles.[50] The V&A Museum in London has a collection of mainly export lacquerware[50] totalling around 2,500 pieces.[53]

Artisans edit

Amongst those lacquer artists that have been named as Living National Treasures are Kazumi Murose (室瀬和美), Kōichi Nakano (中野孝一), Fumio Mae (前史雄), Masami Isoi (磯井正美), Hitoshi Ōta (太田儔), Yoshito Yamashita (山下義人), Isao Ōnishi (大西勲), Kunie Komori (小森邦衞), Kiichirō Masumura (増村紀一郎), and Shōsai Kitamura (北村昭斎).

Past Living National Treasures were Shōzan Takano (高野松山), Gonroku Matsuda (松田権六), Naoji Terai (寺井直次), Yoshikuni Taguchi (田口善国), Shōgyo Ōba (大場松魚), Otomaru Kōdō (音丸耕堂), Taihō Mae (前大峰), Joshin Isoi (磯井如真), Yūsai Akaji (赤地友哉), Mashiki Masumura (増村益城), and Keishirō Shioda (塩多慶四郎).

Okada Akito (岡田章人作, 1910–1968) was exhibited regularly at the Nitten exhibition after 1947, and he served as a lacquer-restoration master for the Imperial Household collections.[54]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Masayuki Murata. 明治工芸入門 p.24. Me no Me, 2017 ISBN 978-4907211110
  2. ^ Urushi-nuri at JAANUS - Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System
  3. ^ Ted J.J. Leyenaar. (PDF). Netherlands: National Museum of Ethnology Museum Volkenkunde. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 13, 2014. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
  4. ^ Kathryn Santner (October 2, 2012). "Writ in Lacquer: A Genteel Courtship on a Mexican Sewing Box". Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
  5. ^ a b 1万2千年前のウルシ木片 世界最古、福井で出土, The Nikkei, November 6, 2011
  6. ^ . Hokkaido Prefectural Government, Hokkaido Tourism Organization. Archived from the original on 7 July 2020. Retrieved 13 November 2022.
  7. ^ Hokkaido Government
  8. ^ a b c d Jomon crafts and what they were for heritageofjapan.wordpress.com
  9. ^ , Mark Hudson, Asia-Pacific Magazine, No. 2 May 1996 pp. 47-48.
  10. ^ The Asahi Shimbun
  11. ^ a b c The Asahi Shimbun
  12. ^ Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Cultural History
  13. ^ a b Taka maki-e. The Asahi Shimbun
  14. ^ a b The Asahi Shimbun
  15. ^ a b Crill, Rosemary; Skelton, Robert (2004). Arts of Mughal India: studies in honour of Robert Skelton. Ahmedabad: Mapin. ISBN 978-1-890206-71-0. OCLC 249644703.
  16. ^ BOXER, CHARLES RALPH (2020). CHRISTIAN CENTURY IN JAPAN 1549-1650. S.l.: ISHI PRESS. ISBN 978-4-87187-109-9. OCLC 1152479970.
  17. ^ BOXER, CHARLES RALPH (2020). CHRISTIAN CENTURY IN JAPAN 1549-1650. S.l.: ISHI PRESS. ISBN 978-4-87187-109-9. OCLC 1152479970.
  18. ^ Victoria and Albert Museum; Jaffer, Amin; Corrigan, Karina; Jones, Robin D; Peabody Essex Museum (2001). Furniture from British India and Ceylon: a catalogue of the collections in the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Peabody Essex Museum. London: V & A Publications. ISBN 978-1-85177-318-3. OCLC 45580438.
  19. ^ Hua, Jueming; Feng, Lisheng (2021). Thirty Great Inventions of China From Millet Agriculture to Artemisinin. Singapore: Springer Singapore Pte. Limited. ISBN 978-981-15-6525-0. OCLC 1227389246.
  20. ^ Victoria and Albert Museum; James, Elizabeth (1998). The Victoria and Albert Museum: a bibliography and exhibition chronology, 1852-1996. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-07424-5. OCLC 900484109.
  21. ^ Iby, Elfriede (2015). Investigation and Conservation of East Asian Cabinets in Imperial Residences (1700-1900). Böhlau Verlag. ISBN 978-3-205-20192-2. OCLC 934770556.
  22. ^ Kleutghen, Kristina (2017). "Imports and Imitations: The Taste for Japanese Lacquer in Eighteenth-Century China and France". Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies. 17 (2): 175–206. doi:10.1353/jem.2017.0013. ISSN 1531-0485. OCLC 7308043513. S2CID 165251830.
  23. ^ "AN IMPERIAL GOLD-LACQUERED INCENSE STAND". www.christies.com. Retrieved 2021-01-19.
  24. ^ . japan-and-mexico-meet.tumblr.com. Archived from the original on 2021-04-16. Retrieved 2021-01-19.
  25. ^ urushi-joboji.com
  26. ^ Masayuki Murata. 明治工芸入門 p.104. Me no Me, 2017 ISBN 978-4907211110
  27. ^ Yūji Yamashita. 明治の細密工芸 p.80. Heibonsha, 2014 ISBN 978-4582922172
  28. ^ a b c Earle 1999, pp. 186–187.
  29. ^ Earle, Joe, "Zeshin Redux", Orientations, Vol. 29, No. 2, March, 2008, p. 136
  30. ^ a b c Earle 1999, p. 187.
  31. ^ Earle 1999, pp. 187–188.
  32. ^ Earle 1999, p. 185.
  33. ^ Shibayama zaiku. Kotobank.
  34. ^ Earle 1999, pp. 96, 187.
  35. ^ a b Yūji Yamashita. 明治の細密工芸 pp.60-61. Heibonsha, 2014 ISBN 978-4582922172
  36. ^ Earle 1999, pp. 93–94.
  37. ^ Earle 1999, pp. 30–31.
  38. ^ Liddell, C. B. (2013-12-14). "[Review:] Japonisme and the Rise of the Modern Art Movement: The Arts of the Meiji Period". The Japan Times. Retrieved 2020-03-19.
  39. ^ Earle 1999, p. 188.
  40. ^ Lesley Kehoe Galleries
  41. ^ 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa
  42. ^ Web Dentsu. September 5, 2016
  43. ^ Nikkan Kogyo Shimbun. September 21, 2017
  44. ^ J J Quin, The Lacquer Industry of Japan. Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan - 1881, p.11
  45. ^ Earle 1999, pp. 186, 378.
  46. ^ Earle 1999, p. 186.
  47. ^ Jihei Murase – The Technique of Lacquer on Vimeo
  48. ^ "History and Culture of Wajima-Nuri:Wajima Museum of Urushi Art". www.city.wajima.ishikawa.jp. Retrieved 2018-04-23.
  49. ^ "Collection Highlights | Tokugawa Art Museum". www.tokugawa-art-museum.jp. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  50. ^ a b c von Seibold, Anastasia (11 October 2018). "A new collector's guide to Japanese lacquer". www.christies.com. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  51. ^ "The Eight Collections". Nasser David Khalili. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  52. ^ "Japanese Lacquer, 1600–1900: Selections from the Charles A. Greeneld Collection". www.metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  53. ^ Victoria and Albert Museum, Online Museum (2011-03-04). "Lacquer at the V&A". www.vam.ac.uk. Retrieved 2020-05-01.
  54. ^ "Okada Akito | Document Box (Ryōshibako) with Dayflowers | Japan | Shōwa period (1926–89)". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2023-06-24.

References edit

  • Facing Modern Times - The Revival of Japanese Lacquer Art 1890-1950
  • Bridge of dreams: the Mary Griggs Burke collection of Japanese art, a catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries (fully available online as PDF), which contains material on Japanese lacquerware
  • Japanese Lacquer, 1600-1900 : selections from the Charles A. Greenfield collection, a catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries (fully available online as PDF)
  • Urushi: Proceedings of the Urushi Study Group, June 10–27, 1985, Tokyo (fully available online as PDF)

Sources edit

  • Earle, Joe (1999). Splendors of Meiji : treasures of imperial Japan : masterpieces from the Khalili Collection. St. Petersburg, Fla.: Broughton International Inc. ISBN 1874780137. OCLC 42476594.

Further reading edit

  • Matsuda, Gonroku (2019). The Book of Urushi: Japanese Lacquerware from a Master. Tokyo: Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture.

External links edit

  • URUSHI - JAPANESE LACQUER IN MODERN DESIGN
  • "URUSHI LACQUER + DESIGN. EAST MEETS WEST" exhibition in The International Design Museum Munich, Germany.
  • Urushi-nuri at JAANUS.

japanese, lacquerware, european, lacquerware, technique, japanning, lacquerware, 漆器, shikki, japanese, craft, with, wide, range, fine, decorative, arts, lacquer, been, used, urushi, prints, wide, variety, objects, from, buddha, statues, bento, boxes, food, wri. For the European lacquerware technique see Japanning Lacquerware 漆器 shikki is a Japanese craft with a wide range of fine and decorative arts as lacquer has been used in urushi e prints and on a wide variety of objects from Buddha statues to bento boxes for food Writing lacquer box with Irises at Yatsuhashi by Ogata Kōrin Edo period National Treasure Inro in maki e lacquer Edo period 18th centuryThe characteristic of Japanese lacquerware is the diversity of lacquerware using a decoration technique called maki e 蒔絵 in which metal powder is sprinkled to attach to lacquer The invention of various maki e techniques in Japanese history expanded artistic expression and various tools and works of art such as inro are highly decorative 1 A number of terms are used in Japanese to refer to lacquerware Shikki 漆器 means lacquer ware in the most literal sense while nurimono 塗物 means coated things and urushi nuri 漆塗 means lacquer coating 2 The terms related to lacquer or lacquerware such as Japanning Urushiol and maque which means lacquer in Mexican Spanish are derived from Japanese lacquerware 3 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Jōmon Edo period 1 2 The Meiji era 1 3 Twentieth century onwards 2 Techniques and processes 3 Regional forms 4 National Treasures 5 Collections 6 Artisans 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editJōmon Edo period edit nbsp Detailed view of a lacquer panel of the Tamamushi Shrine from the Asuka period 7th century National Treasure nbsp Tebako Cosmetic box Design of wheels in stream in maki e lacquer and mother of pearl inlay Heian period 12th century National Treasure nbsp A Japanese lacquerware produced and exported at the request of the Society of Jesus Azuchi Momoyama period 16th century Kyushu National Museum nbsp Maki e sake bottle with Tokugawa clan s mon emblem Edo period 18th centuryIt has been confirmed that the lacquer tree existed in Japan from 12 600 years ago in the incipient Jōmon period This was confirmed by radioactive carbon dating of the lacquer tree found at the Torihama shell mound and is the oldest lacquer tree in the world found as of 2011 5 Lacquer was used in Japan as early as 7000 BCE during the Jōmon period Evidence for the earliest lacquerware was discovered at the Kakinoshima B Excavation Site in Hokkaido The ornaments woven with lacquered red thread were discovered in a pit grave dating from the first half of the Initial Jōmon period Also at Kakinoshima A Excavation Site earthenware with a spout painted with vermilion lacquer which was made 3200 years ago was found almost completely intact 6 7 5 Lacquering technology may have been invented by the Jōmon They learned to refine urushi poison oak sap the process taking several months Iron oxide colcothar and cinnabar mercury sulfide were used for producing red lacquer 8 Lacquer was used both on pottery and on different types of wooden items In some cases burial clothes for the dead were also lacquered 8 Many lacquered objects have turned up during the Early Jōmon period this indicates that this was an established part of Jōmon culture 8 Experts are divided on whether Jōmon lacquer was derived from Chinese techniques or invented independently For example Mark Hudson believes that Jomon lacquer technology was developed independently in Japan rather than being introduced from China as once believed 9 8 One of the masterpieces of ancient Japanese lacquer objects is the Tamamushi Shrine from middle of the seventh century AD The shrine is made of lacquered hinoki or Japanese cypress and camphor wood both native species While commonly referred to as urushi since the Meiji period some scholars have argued instead that the paintings employ the technique known as mitsuda e an early type of oil painting using perilla shiso oil with litharge as a desiccant Many traditional crafts and industrial arts produced throughout Japanese history were initially influenced by China and afterward experienced various native stylistic influences and innovations over the centuries In the Heian period 794 1185 various maki e techniques characteristic of Japanese lacquerware were developed While the method of drawing designs with a brush by dissolving gold powder in lacquer is a common technique in other countries the method of drawing designs with lacquer and then sprinkling gold silver or copper powder of various sizes and shapes on top to polish them was developed in Japan This made it possible to make the gold and silver of lacquerware brighter than before 1 Togidashi maki e a kind of maki e was developed and completed in this period 10 And hira maki e was developed in the latter half of this period 11 In the Kamakura period 1185 1333 carved lacquer from the Song Dynasty of China was imported to Japan However many Japanese lacquer craftsmen did not adopt the Chinese method of depositing lacquer and then carving it instead they created Kamakurabori a method of carving wood and then coating lacquer 12 During this period Hira maki e was completed and taka maki e was newly developed 11 13 In the Muromachi period 1336 1573 shishiai togidashi maki e the most complicated of the typical maki e techniques was developed as well as new taka maki e techniques using grinding stones and clay powders 14 13 15 16 Japanese lacquerware was abundantly exported to neighboring East Asia Southeast Asia and even India Lacquer particularly Japanese was known at Indian courts and featured among the gifts offered by Europeans to local rulers Japanese lacquer was well known to Sir Thomas Roe for example as a suitable type of gift to the emperor Jahangir and he notes in 1616 that rarities from China and Japan were highly desirable in India 17 18 15 In China the Ming and Qing rulers generally described Japanese lacquerwares as foreign lacquer yangqi Yang Ming and famous lacquer man Zhejiang made annotations for A Record of Decoration with Lacquer People of the Ming Dynasty once recorded The decoration art with lacquer coated with gold originated maki e from Japan Yang in the reign of Xuande of the Ming dynasty made a trip to Japan to study Japanese techniques and a Japanese visited a Chinese imperial workshop in Beijing during the Ming dynasty It is well documented that the Yongzheng Emperor had a formidable interest in Japanese lacquer yangqi and this was reflected in many of the works produced in the Imperial workshops during his reign 19 20 21 22 23 In the Azuchi Momoyama period 1568 1600 also made its way into Colonial Mexico Manila Galleons and Europe by Nanban trade Japanese lacquerware attracted European aristocrats and missionaries from Europe and western style chests and church furniture were exported in response to their requests 24 25 In this period hira maki e became very popular because of mass production 11 The Edo period 1603 1868 saw an increase in the focused cultivation of lacquer trees and the development of the techniques used In the 18th century colored lacquers came into wider use With the development of economy and culture the artistic quality of lacquered furniture has improved Hon ami Kōetsu and Ogata Kōrin brought the designs of the Rinpa school of painting into lacquerware From the middle of the Edo period Inro became popular as men s accessories and wealthy merchants of the chōnin class and samurai class collected inro of high aesthetic value precisely designed with lacquer 26 27 Marie Antoinette and Maria Theresa are known collectors of Japanese lacquerware and their collections are now often exhibited in the Louvre and the Palace of Versailles 1 During this period due to the development of the economy shishiai togidashi maki e an advanced technique became popular 14 nbsp Sake Ewer with Chrysanthemums and Paulownia Crests in Alternating Fields Early 17th century Azuchi Momoyama period nbsp Tiered Stand with Designs Alluding to The Tale of Genji by Hon ami Kōetsu Edo oeriod 17th century nbsp Reading Stand with Mount Yoshino nbsp Stationery Stand Morning sun paulownia and phoenix in maki e nbsp Lacquered exterior of wakizashi Fusamune nbsp Saddle and Stirrups with Wisterias The Meiji era edit nbsp Maki e Fuji Tagonoura by Shibata Zeshin Meiji period 1872 nbsp Maki e Writing table by Shirayama Shosai Meiji period 19th century Khalili Collection of Japanese ArtEarly nineteenth century economic hardship decreased the demand for gold or silver decorated lacquerwares 28 The Meiji era saw a renewed interest in lacquer as artists developed new designs and experimented with new textures and finishes Foremost among these was Shibata Zeshin 28 who has been called Japan s greatest lacquerer 29 The appeal of his highly original style was in the choice of motifs and subject matter rather than embedded gold and silver He placed lacquer panels in frames imitating Western oil paintings 30 Other notable lacquer artists of the 19th century include Nakayama Komin and Shirayama Shosai both of whom in contrast with Zeshin maintained a classical style that owed a lot to Japanese and Chinese landscape art 31 Maki e was the most common technique for quality lacquerware in this period 32 Shibayama wares invented in the 1770s during the Edo period 33 combined lacquer gold silver shellfish ivory coral tortoise shell ceramics and other novel materials in elaborate decorations 34 35 They get their name from Shibayama Senzo originally Onogi Senzo who adopted the name of his hometown on moving to Edo and whose family produced and exhibited lacquerware in the new style 36 This style became popular in the Meiji period because it could be produced more quickly and cheaply than traditional lacquers 30 Somada ware invented in the 1670s during the Edo period is characterized by a regular pattern of finely cut shellfish gold leaf and silver leaf and became popular during this period 35 Richly decorated lacquerwares in original designs were popular domestically and even more so with Western buyers during this period of European and American fascination with Japanese art 28 The government took an active interest in the art export market promoting Japan s lacquers and other decorative arts at a succession of world s fairs 37 38 Lacquer from Japanese workshops was recognised as technically superior to what could be produced anywhere else in the world 30 nbsp Box for Incense Set with Design of Plum and Bamboo Edo or Meiji period 19th century nbsp Picnic Box with Design of the Scene from The Tale of Genji in Maki e Lacquer Edo or Meiji period 19th century nbsp Inro Cabinet with Design of Waterfall in Maki e Lacquer Edo or Meiji period 19th centuryTwentieth century onwards edit nbsp By Living National Treasure Gonroku Matsuda 1960After the Meiji era a new generation of artists further changed the decorative language depicting plants in a stylised way without naturalistic settings 39 In recent decades there has been effort made by the Japanese government to preserve the art of making lacquerware Through the process of designating important craftsmen such as Gonroku Matsuda 松田権六 and Kazumi Murose 室瀬和美 as Living National Treasure as well the government s effort to encourage the development of new Urushi workshop the art is gradually establishing itself once again The best lacquer technique from the end of the Edo period to the Meiji period especially the inro technique was almost lost in the westernization of Japanese lifestyle However in 1985 Tatsuo Kitamura 北村辰夫 set up his own studio called Unryuan 雲龍庵 and succeeded in recreating it His lacquer works are collected in the Victoria and Albert Museum and the 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art Kanazawa and are an object of collection for the world s wealthy 40 41 42 43 In 2020 the Crafts Gallery of the National Museum of Modern Art Tokyo which collects works made by Living National Treasures moved Kanazawa Ishikawa Prefecture This is due to the Japanese government s policy of local revitalization Kanazawa which flourished under the Maeda clan in the Edo period is a city with a thriving traditional industry Techniques and processes edit nbsp Closeup of the chinkin lacquer method depicting needles of a pine tree nbsp Inro Design of minute patterns in mother of pearl inlay Somada characterized by a combination of raden and makie techniques Edo periodAs in other countries where lacquerware has traditionally been produced the process is fundamentally quite basic An object is formed from wood sometimes leather paper or basketry Lacquer is applied to seal and protect the object and then decoration is added Generally three coats undercoat middle coat and final coat are used the final coat sometimes being clear rather than black lacquer in order to allow decorations to show through Alongside the red and black lacquers it is common to see the use of inlay often seashells or similar materials as well as mica or other materials The application of gold powder is known as maki e and is a very common decorative element A few examples of traditional techniques follow ikkanbari 一閑張 also known as harinuki 張貫 is one common technique used to make tea wares Invented by Hiki Ikkan in the early 17th century the process involves the application of layers of lacquer to paper shaped in a mold iro urushi 色漆 literally color lacquer was created by adding pigments to clear lacquer The limits of natural pigments allowed only five colors red black yellow green and brown to be used up until the 19th century when various innovations appeared along with the later introduction of Western artificial pigments Shibata Zeshin was a major innovator in this field using not only color but also other substances mixed in with his lacquer to achieve a wide variety of effects including the simulated appearance of precious metals which were heavily restricted from artistic use at the time due to government concerns over excessive extravagance shunkei nuri 春慶塗 Shunkei lacquerware it is created using transparent lacquer on yellow or red stained wood so that the natural wood grain can be seen similar to Kuroye Nuri in this respect The name is derived from the inventor who was active in Sakai during the reign of the Emperor Go Kameyama 1368 1392 This method became popular in the 17th century in Takayama Hida province Many articles for use in tea drinking were manufactured using this technique 44 urushi hanga 漆絵版画 developed by Hakuo Iriyama producing a printing plate from dry lacquer that was carved and finally used like a block print but instead of traditional printing colors with pigmented lacquer raden 螺鈿 using inlays of shell and ivory to decorate pieces that usually have a wood base maki e 蒔絵 using metal powders including gold silver copper and their alloys spread with bamboo tubes or fine brushes In hiramaki e the powders are sprinkled onto wet lacquer to be then covered by another layer of lacquer Takamaki e achieves a high relief effect by repeated layers sometimes including the addition of charcoal sawdust or clay 45 Togidashi e involves covering the original maki e in several layers of lacquer then polishing down until the design is visible 46 Regional forms edit nbsp Ewer in negoro style The red lacquer wears away gradually and irregularly with use producing the effect of natural aging for which these pieces are highly appreciated As with most traditional arts variations emerged over time as individual centers of production developed their own unique techniques and styles Aizu wares developed in the late 16th century and saw a peak in their production in the Meiji period One Aizu technique is that of etching designs or images into the surface of the lacquer and then filling in the space with gold or other materials Other techniques distinctive of Aizu involve the burnishing of various clays and primers in the process Jōhana wares are generally known for their use of maki e and mitsuda e gold and lead decoration respectively and for the use of white or whitish lacquer Negoro lacquerwares were produced at the Negoro ji temple complex in Izumi province The red layers of lacquer on Negoro wares are intended to gradually wear away with use revealing the black lacquer underneath 47 This effect has since been copied and emulated elsewhere Ryukyuan lacquerware though frequently included among types of Japanese lacquer actually developed largely independently with strong influences from China and Southeast Asia as the Ryukyu Islands did not come under Japanese control until 1609 Tsugaru wares feature a technique supposedly developed by Ikeda Gentarō at the end of the 17th century multiple layers of different colored lacquers are used to create a colorful mottled effect Wakasa wares are made using a variety of colors and the inclusion of eggshells rice chaff or other materials in the base coats Silver or gold foil is used as well and sealed under a layer of transparent lacquer Wajima nuri 輪島塗 can be dated back to late 15th century from Wajima Ishikawa Prefecture Wajima nuri is famous for is its durable undercoating that is achieved by the application of multiple layers of urushi mixed with powdered diatomaceous earth ji no ko onto delicate zelkova wooden substrates 48 National Treasures editThe government has registered a number of ancient items as National Treasures Many of them are Buddhist items dating from the Heian period See List of National Treasures of Japan crafts others Collections editThe Tokugawa Art Museum in Nagoya City Japan has a lacquer collection including the Edo period maki e bridal trousseau that was designated a National Treasure 49 50 Today Japanese lacquerware is sought by collectors and museums around the world Modern collections of Japanese lacquerware outside Japan include the Nasser D Khalili Collection of Japanese Art which includes works by Shitaba Zeshin and other notable artists Nasser Khalili has run exhibitions focused on Shibata Zeshin s work in four countries 51 The Charles A Greenfield Collection in the United States covers the period from 1600 to 1900 52 Marie Antoinette s collection of domestic lacquer is split between the Louvre the Guimet Museum and the Palace of Versailles 50 The V amp A Museum in London has a collection of mainly export lacquerware 50 totalling around 2 500 pieces 53 Artisans editAmongst those lacquer artists that have been named as Living National Treasures are Kazumi Murose 室瀬和美 Kōichi Nakano 中野孝一 Fumio Mae 前史雄 Masami Isoi 磯井正美 Hitoshi Ōta 太田儔 Yoshito Yamashita 山下義人 Isao Ōnishi 大西勲 Kunie Komori 小森邦衞 Kiichirō Masumura 増村紀一郎 and Shōsai Kitamura 北村昭斎 Past Living National Treasures were Shōzan Takano 高野松山 Gonroku Matsuda 松田権六 Naoji Terai 寺井直次 Yoshikuni Taguchi 田口善国 Shōgyo Ōba 大場松魚 Otomaru Kōdō 音丸耕堂 Taihō Mae 前大峰 Joshin Isoi 磯井如真 Yusai Akaji 赤地友哉 Mashiki Masumura 増村益城 and Keishirō Shioda 塩多慶四郎 Okada Akito 岡田章人作 1910 1968 was exhibited regularly at the Nitten exhibition after 1947 and he served as a lacquer restoration master for the Imperial Household collections 54 Further information Maehata GahoSee also editKintsugi Japanning a term for a later European imitation of this technique using plant resins to create a different type of lacquer List of collections of Japanese artNotes edit a b c Masayuki Murata 明治工芸入門 p 24 Me no Me 2017 ISBN 978 4907211110 Urushi nuri at JAANUS Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Ted J J Leyenaar Mexican lacquers from Guerrero La laca Mexicana de Guerrero PDF Netherlands National Museum of Ethnology Museum Volkenkunde Archived from the original PDF on December 13 2014 Retrieved June 10 2015 Kathryn Santner October 2 2012 Writ in Lacquer A Genteel Courtship on a Mexican Sewing Box Los Angeles Los Angeles County Museum of Art Retrieved June 10 2015 a b 1万2千年前のウルシ木片 世界最古 福井で出土 The Nikkei November 6 2011 Kakinoshima Jomon Archaeological Site Hokkaido Prefectural Government Hokkaido Tourism Organization Archived from the original on 7 July 2020 Retrieved 13 November 2022 Kakinoshima Excavation Site Hokkaido Government a b c d Jomon crafts and what they were for heritageofjapan wordpress com Sannai Maruyama A New View of Prehistoric Japan Mark Hudson Asia Pacific Magazine No 2 May 1996 pp 47 48 Togidashi maki e The Asahi Shimbun a b c Hira maki e The Asahi Shimbun Carved lacquer and Lacquered sculpture Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Cultural History a b Taka maki e The Asahi Shimbun a b Shishia tokidashi maki e The Asahi Shimbun a b Crill Rosemary Skelton Robert 2004 Arts of Mughal India studies in honour of Robert Skelton Ahmedabad Mapin ISBN 978 1 890206 71 0 OCLC 249644703 BOXER CHARLES RALPH 2020 CHRISTIAN CENTURY IN JAPAN 1549 1650 S l ISHI PRESS ISBN 978 4 87187 109 9 OCLC 1152479970 BOXER CHARLES RALPH 2020 CHRISTIAN CENTURY IN JAPAN 1549 1650 S l ISHI PRESS ISBN 978 4 87187 109 9 OCLC 1152479970 Victoria and Albert Museum Jaffer Amin Corrigan Karina Jones Robin D Peabody Essex Museum 2001 Furniture from British India and Ceylon a catalogue of the collections in the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Peabody Essex Museum London V amp A Publications ISBN 978 1 85177 318 3 OCLC 45580438 Hua Jueming Feng Lisheng 2021 Thirty Great Inventions of China From Millet Agriculture to Artemisinin Singapore Springer Singapore Pte Limited ISBN 978 981 15 6525 0 OCLC 1227389246 Victoria and Albert Museum James Elizabeth 1998 The Victoria and Albert Museum a bibliography and exhibition chronology 1852 1996 London Routledge ISBN 978 1 315 07424 5 OCLC 900484109 Iby Elfriede 2015 Investigation and Conservation of East Asian Cabinets in Imperial Residences 1700 1900 Bohlau Verlag ISBN 978 3 205 20192 2 OCLC 934770556 Kleutghen Kristina 2017 Imports and Imitations The Taste for Japanese Lacquer in Eighteenth Century China and France Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies 17 2 175 206 doi 10 1353 jem 2017 0013 ISSN 1531 0485 OCLC 7308043513 S2CID 165251830 AN IMPERIAL GOLD LACQUERED INCENSE STAND www christies com Retrieved 2021 01 19 Namban amp Enconchado Japan and Mexico Meet japan and mexico meet tumblr com Archived from the original on 2021 04 16 Retrieved 2021 01 19 Urushi once attracted the world urushi joboji com Masayuki Murata 明治工芸入門 p 104 Me no Me 2017 ISBN 978 4907211110 Yuji Yamashita 明治の細密工芸 p 80 Heibonsha 2014 ISBN 978 4582922172 a b c Earle 1999 pp 186 187 Earle Joe Zeshin Redux Orientations Vol 29 No 2 March 2008 p 136 a b c Earle 1999 p 187 Earle 1999 pp 187 188 Earle 1999 p 185 Shibayama zaiku Kotobank Earle 1999 pp 96 187 a b Yuji Yamashita 明治の細密工芸 pp 60 61 Heibonsha 2014 ISBN 978 4582922172 Earle 1999 pp 93 94 Earle 1999 pp 30 31 Liddell C B 2013 12 14 Review Japonisme and the Rise of the Modern Art Movement The Arts of the Meiji Period The Japan Times Retrieved 2020 03 19 Earle 1999 p 188 Unryuan Kitamura Tatsuo Lesley Kehoe Galleries 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art Kanazawa 超絶の伝統工芸技術の復元から 世界ブランド構築へのマーケティングヒストリー Web Dentsu September 5 2016 雲龍庵とは何者ぞ 細部に宿る漆工の美 超絶技巧の全貌 雲龍庵と希龍舎 Nikkan Kogyo Shimbun September 21 2017 J J Quin The Lacquer Industry of Japan Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan 1881 p 11 Earle 1999 pp 186 378 Earle 1999 p 186 Jihei Murase The Technique of Lacquer on Vimeo History and Culture of Wajima Nuri Wajima Museum of Urushi Art www city wajima ishikawa jp Retrieved 2018 04 23 Collection Highlights Tokugawa Art Museum www tokugawa art museum jp Retrieved 2020 05 01 a b c von Seibold Anastasia 11 October 2018 A new collector s guide to Japanese lacquer www christies com Retrieved 2020 05 01 The Eight Collections Nasser David Khalili Retrieved 2020 05 01 Japanese Lacquer 1600 1900 Selections from the Charles A Greeneld Collection www metmuseum org Retrieved 2020 05 01 Victoria and Albert Museum Online Museum 2011 03 04 Lacquer at the V amp A www vam ac uk Retrieved 2020 05 01 Okada Akito Document Box Ryōshibako with Dayflowers Japan Shōwa period 1926 89 The Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 2023 06 24 References editFacing Modern Times The Revival of Japanese Lacquer Art 1890 1950 Bridge of dreams the Mary Griggs Burke collection of Japanese art a catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries fully available online as PDF which contains material on Japanese lacquerware Japanese Lacquer 1600 1900 selections from the Charles A Greenfield collection a catalog from The Metropolitan Museum of Art Libraries fully available online as PDF Urushi Proceedings of the Urushi Study Group June 10 27 1985 Tokyo fully available online as PDF Sources editEarle Joe 1999 Splendors of Meiji treasures of imperial Japan masterpieces from the Khalili Collection St Petersburg Fla Broughton International Inc ISBN 1874780137 OCLC 42476594 Further reading editMatsuda Gonroku 2019 The Book of Urushi Japanese Lacquerware from a Master Tokyo Japan Publishing Industry Foundation for Culture External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lacquerware of Japan URUSHI JAPANESE LACQUER IN MODERN DESIGN URUSHI LACQUER DESIGN EAST MEETS WEST exhibition in The International Design Museum Munich Germany Urushi nuri at JAANUS Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese lacquerware amp oldid 1194245562, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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