Large Japanese lacquer chest

Price on request


Large Japanese lacquer chest

A rectangular Japanese transition style chest with hinged cover with fire gilt copper fittings. In pictorial style with a fine decoration in various techniques. Each side with a cartouche decorated with a landscape of temples between trees, hills and water, all within bands of geometrical lines. The inside red, the cover with blooming branch and butterflies. Bronzes re-gilt and restorations to the lacquerwork.

Japanese export lacquerware was one of the many goods the VOC shipped from Asia to Europe. The lacquerware was made in Japan for export and delivered in all forms, such as suitcases, trunks, boxes and cabinets. The first shipment of lacquerware by the VOC had disappointing sales, northwestern Europeans were unfamiliar with lacquer or did not like the Namban style and were not prepared to pay the high prices demanded. The company and the States-General presented special consignments as gifts to rulers and high officials of foreign countries. They continued to ship lacquerware and the demand increased. After the early 1640’s, when larger shipments of lacquer began to arrive regularly in Amsterdam, agents of the various Royal Houses in Europe came to buy at the VOC auction. Towards the end of the seventeenth century, it became increasingly difficult for the Company to buy good quality pieces at acceptable prices. The account books of the Company show that after 1693 not a single piece of lacquerware was shipped from Japan.
 
Making Japanese lacquerware was fiddly, took a lot of time and was very expensive. Even though the lacquerware was popular it did not bring the VOC much profit because of the size of the pieces, they simply took too much room in the hold of the ship. The trade in Japanese lacquerware was therefore only a small part of the VOC trade with Japan. It was purchased on a limited scale, initially in Hirado and after 1641 in Nagasaki. Since then the trade went through Deshima, a small artificial island in the Bay of Nagasaki.
 
Cf. Oliver Impey & Christiaan Jörg, Japanese Export Lacquer 1580-1850, 2005, pp. 27-29.

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Price
Price on request
Period
1630-1650
Material
Japan Lacquer, Gilded bronze
Dimensions
65.5 x 152 x 74.5 cm
Reference
100-48