Exhibition | Chinese Lacquer: Treasures from the Irving Collection

清乾隆 剔彩玉玦形漆盒 / Box in the Shape of an Archaic Jade Jue, Qianlong period (1736–95), carved red and green lacquer; 3.2 x 9.2 x 13 cm (New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2015.500.1.9a, b).
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Now on view at The Met:
Chinese Lacquer: Treasures from the Irving Collection, 12th–18th Century
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 15 August 2015 — 19 June 2016
Lacquer, the resin of a family of trees found throughout southern China—as well as in Southeast Asia, Korea, and Japan—is an amazing material. When exposed to oxygen and humidity, lacquer hardens or polymerizes, becoming a natural plastic and an ideal protective covering for screens, trays, and other implements. Mixed with pigments, particularly cinnabar (red) and carbon (black), lacquer has been also used as an artistic media for millennia.
This installation, which features all of the most important examples of Chinese lacquer in the Museum’s collection, explores the laborious techniques used to create scenes based on history and literature, images of popular gods and mythical and real animals, and representations of landscapes and flowers and birds.



















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