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East Asian Lacquer

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This volume presents the groundbreaking findings of the Mazarin Chest Project, a major international collaboration focused on one of the most magnificent examples of Japanese export lacquerware, ma...
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  • 01 November 2011
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A key consequence of the western discovery of sixteenth-century Japan was the emergence of workshops producing lacquerware for the European market. As with East Asian porcelain, Japanese lacquer quickly became an absolute must-have, its gold-on-black pictorial schemes enriching the sumptuous interiors of the aristocratic and wealthy. The Mazarin Chest, which was made in Kyoto in the late 1630s to early 1640s and has belonged to the Victoria and Albert Museum since 1882, is the largest and most spectacular survivor of this specialist industry. Since 2003 it has been the focus of a major research and conservation project involving curators, conservators and scientists in the UK, Germany, Japan and Poland. The main outcomes of this and related research, initially presented at an international conference held at the V&A*, are published in this discipline-defining compilation of twenty-one papers.

The recognition, acceptance and negotiation of cultural differences have been core concerns of the Mazarin Chest Project. It is for this reason that this title is published in English and Japanese: the English edition as hard copy with the Japanese digital version included on a DVD.

This title has been published in association with the Victoria and Albert Museum.

*Conference entitled:�Crossing Borders: The Conservation, Science and Material Culture of East Asian Lacquer

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Price: £80.00
Pages: 320
Publisher: Archetype Publications
Imprint: Archetype Publications
Publication Date: 01 November 2011
Trim Size: 12.60 X 8.50 in
ISBN: 9781904982609
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

ART / Conservation & Preservation, Conservation, restoration and care of artworks

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Foreword

List of Contributors

Material Culture

Out of touch: on the sensorial in the historical interpretation of Japanese lacquer

Christine M.E. Guth

Maritime trade in Asia and the circulation of lacquerware

Kaori Hidaka

How many 'Mazarin Chests' were there?

Julia Hutt

Two boxes and two balustrades: private orders for fine Japanese export lacquer

Cynthia Viall�

Japanese lacquer in eighteenth-century Europe: status and value - market price of craftsmanship and the canon of the grand arts

Monika Bincsik

Maki-e�production of the Mid-Edo period as seen through historical European collections

Meiko Nagashima

Science and Conservation

Developing a methodology for the artificial ageing of�urushi�and a preliminary examination of�urushi-based conservation options

Brenda Keneghan

Solvent effects on East Asian lacquer (Toxicodendron vernicifluum)

Carolyn McSharry, Rupert Faulkner, Shayne Rivers, Milo S.P. Shaffer and Tom Welton

Stress measurement in East Asian lacquer thin films due to changes in relative humidity using phase shifting interferometry

Adel E. Elmahdy, Pablo D. Ruiz, Ricky D. Wildman, Jonathan M. Huntley and Shayne Rivers

A methodology for modelling the mechanical response of lacquer (urushi) under varying environmental conditions

Xinyi Liu, Adel E. Elmahdy, Ian A. Ashcroft and Ricky D. Wildman

New evidence for the use of Southeast Asian raw materials in seventeenth-century Japanese export lacquer

Arlen Heginbotham and Michael Schilling

Delamination and flaking of East Asian export lacquer coatings on wood substrates

Nanke Schellmann

Construction methods of Japanese writing boxes (suzuribako)

Stacy Bowe and Blythe McCarthy

The effects of consolidation on the appearance of powdery pigmented Japanese lacquer surfaces

Catherine Coueignoux

The autofluorescence of Asian lacquer

Marianne Webb

Japanese lacquered armour in context: cross-sectional analysis as an aid for appraisal

Jamie Hood

An investigation into the cleaning of red lacquer (urushi)

Emma Schmuecker

The French connection: developing a conservation treatment plan for eighteenth-century Chinese lacquer panels adapted for an American Beaux Arts-style house

Charles J. Moore

A cornucopia of carving techniques: an analysis and treatment of a Qing dynasty lacquered screen

Suzanna Shaw

Light-induced deterioration of�urushi,�maki-e�and�nashiji�decoration

Yoshihiko Yamashita and Shayne Rivers

Conservation of the photodegraded surface of the Mazarin Chest

Yoshihiko Yamashita and Shayne Rivers