Writing Box with Mount Hatsuse, Muromachi–Azuchi-Momoyama period, 16th century (Important Cultural Property)
Japanese Gallery (Honkan) Room 12
March 12, 2024 (Tue) - June 2, 2024 (Sun)
Lacquer is the sap of the lacquer tree, which grows in East and Southeast Asia. Naturally sticky, it can be brushed onto different materials, and hardens into a durable coating that is waterproof and resistant to acids, alkalis, and heat. Because of its versatility and beauty, lacquer has been central to daily life in parts of Asia for over 9,000 years.
In Japan, artisans coated everyday items with lacquer, including furniture, boxes, dining sets, and cosmetic and writing tools. The base material could be wood, pottery, cloth, leather, or paper. To decorate these items, artisans painted designs with a mixture of lacquer and pigment, or used lacquer like a glue to inlay metal and mother-of-pearl.
But the pinnacle of lacquer decoration in Japan is maki-e (sprinkled picture). It consists of painting a design with lacquer, and then sprinkling metal powders onto the sticky lacquer before it hardens. Artisans first used maki-e techniques in the 8th century. As shown in this gallery, they developed them to an extraordinary degree over the centuries.
Designation | Name | Creation/ Excavation/ Provenance |
Period | Acquisition/ Ownership/ Accession Number |
CMT | ||
Highlight | National Treasure | Box for Monastic Robes, with a Seascape | Heian period, 10th century | Lent by Kyō'ōgokokuji Temple, Kyoto | |||
Highlight | Important Cultural Property | Writing Box with Mount Hatsuse | Muromachi–Azuchi-Momoyama period, 16th century | H-4524 | |||
Writing Box with Cherry Blossoms | Muromachi period, 15th–16th century | H-40 | |||||
Highlight | Incense Box with Scenery of Suma Beach | Passed down by the Matsudaira clan of Izumo Province; previously owned by Matsudaira Naoaki | Muromachi period, 15th–16th century | H-4796 | |||
Highlight | Writing Box with the Monk Saigyō Admiring Cherry Blossoms | Edo period, 18th century | H-57 |