Antique Mid 19th Century Japanese Furniture. DISPLAY CABINET-ON-STAND. TWO-FOLD LACQUERED SCREEN. DECORATIVE IRON CASKET. FOLDING CHAIR. COLLECTOR’S CABINET.
Antique Mid 19th Century Japanese Furniture.
HAVING REMAINED almost completely
isolated from the rest of the world for several hundred years, Japan entered a period of momentous and unprecedented change in the mid 19th century, instigated by the Kurofune Raiho (visit of the black ships) in 1853. Commodore Perry’s American fleet effectively forced the Tokugawa government to reopen Japanese ports to international trade.
THE NEW ORDER
Japan had been a rigid feudal society, steeped in conservatism and slow to change. In 1868, after a short civil war, the last Shogun was overthrown and
the Meiji Emperor — Mutsuhito, who ruled from 1867 to 1912 — was restored, promising modernization. Japanese industries developed at an astounding rate, and her citizens began to turn their backs on many aspects of their traditional past and adopt Western attitudes and customs.
Changes were gradual at first. Although it became fashionable among the wealthy elite to add rooms with a Western theme to their houses, these were generally areas in which to
Six-panel silk and paper screen This screen is
decorated with a stylized landscape scene depicting wildlife – predominantly birds – in their natural habitat. c.1880.
DISPLAY CABINET-ON-STAND
This rosewood display cabinet is from the Meiji period (1867-1912). It has an elaborately carved pediment and stand, both featuring representations of birds and vegetation. The cabinet also has a number of inlaid gold lacquer
panels. Some of the panels slide open to reveal numerous interior shelves and compartments. The relief-carved ivory, bone, mother-of-pearl, and lacquerwork depict figural scenes, floral arrangements, and birds. The whole cabinet is of very fine quality. Late 19th century.
TWO-FOLD LACQUERED SCREEN
Consisting of two lacquer panels, this hinged screen from the Meiji period has carved rosewood and mahogany surrounds and a similarly carved rosewood and mahogany frame. The face of the screen is inlaid with
ivory and mother-of-pearl, and depicts an anthropomorphic battle of frogs, including a commander, infantry, standard-bearers, and trumpeters. The back of the screen is decorated with flowering cherry trees in togidashi (lacquerwork). Late 19th century.
entertain guests, rather than living spaces. Traditional Japanese furniture, rectilinear and plain, was the product of a culture in which people sat on the floor to eat and converse. Cabinets and tables therefore had very short legs. The case furniture in many houses was limited to a large chest for storing bedding, a smaller chest, and a stand for a mirror.
Modular living spaces were divided by a paper screen, typically consisting of two to six panels, and often decorated with paint or simple inlays of ceramic or wood. The joints in the lacquer frame were sometimes disguised with metal mounts. Lacquer was by far the
most common form of surface decoration — usually in black, though sometimes in red.
EXPORT FURNITURE
The greatest changes within the furniture industry were those that catered to the export market. The unsurpassed quality of Japaneselacquer was widely known in the West, and craftsmen began to construct cabinets and screens with gold lacquer grounds, elaborately inlaid with precious natural materials, including ivory and mother-of-pearl, to form designs with Japanese motifs such as dragons or Samurai. This kind of crowded
decoration was anathema to Japanese taste but very popular in the West, and business was brisk.
The export market also benefited from a renaissance among Japanese woodworkers. Although intarsia techniques had been widely understood in Japan for more re than 1,000 years, they had fallen into disuse owing to the preference for lacquered furniture. A process known as Ran Yosegi, or “random parquetry”, whereby mosaics of different woods were assembled to draw attention to their various textures and colours, established the Hakone region as the pre-eminent centre of intarsia work in Meiji Japan. Later,
craftsmen began to adapt Kimono designs for use on furniture, and the process became more refined as it was mechanized.
Japanese expertise in manipulating wood extended to the art of carving. Again, this was an alien concept to most Japanese and the bulk of carved furniture produced in Japan at
this time was sent to international exhibitions and sold abroad. Friezes and crests were carved with scenes adapted from shrines and temples. Traditional Japanese symbolic motifs, such as ripped leaves signifying autumn, delighted Western consumers and found a ready market.
The black-lacquered base
provides a perfect foil for the
silver panel scenes.
DECORATIVE IRON CASKET
The cover of this iron casket by Ryuunsai Yukiyasu is inset with a copper panel decorated in silver and gold relief with a basket of flowers and insects. The sides depict aquatic scenes, flowering trees, and Mount Fuji. The inner rim is ornamented with wisteria and grape vines. c.1870.
FOLDING CHAIR
This red-lacquered priest’s folding chair is from the Edo period (1603-18671. The back is gold-lacquered and carved with manji diaper and a trellis of repeated manji motifs. Originally manji was a Sanskrit symbol that has come to represent
Buddhism in Japan. Mid 19th century.
COLLECTOR’S CABINET
This unusual lacquered cabinet has been made as two stacking parts. The front and sides have recessed panels decorated with roundels on a deep gold ground. The roundels show various scenes in gold and silver, and display a variety
of techniques, including lacquerwork. The upper section of the cabinet has two doors, which open on to a fitted interior containing ten shallow and eight deeper drawers. The lower section has two deep drawers. The whole stands on shaped sabre feet.
The shaped sabre feet are mounted m metal.
There is an arrangement of five
shallow and four deep drawers
behind each cabinet door.
The roundels depict stylized rural and landscape scenes m gold, silver, and coloured lacquerwork.
