Events

The Beauty of Makie-Adorned Furnishings

Genre:
Visual Traditional
Category:
Visual

Lacquer artworks are made using sap collected from the lacquer tree, but maki-e is one among the various lacquer artistic techniques that uniquely developed in Japan. With maki-e, a pattern is first drawn in lacquer and then sprinkled with gold powder before it dries so that powder will adhere to the surface.
In ancient times, maki-e was already being used on sutra boxes and tools for ritual dedications at shrines and temples. Later it was often used to ornament living space furnishings such as drawing room decorations in the Muromachi era (1336~1573) as well as the tools and implements of the high and mighty in the Momoyama era (1573~1603).
Patronization by the Edo period shogunate family and feudal lords and demand on the part of the merchant class spurred the development of ever-increasing superiority in maki-e artisans’ skill and design. At the loss of these patrons with the advent of the Meiji period, these artisans found new avenues for their work, producing furnishings for the imperial and zaibatsu families as well as small boxes and incense containers for export to Europe.
This exhibit centers on works created from the end of the Edo period through Meiji. It includes calligraphic inkstone cases, which were often produced in sets together with a bundai (a small, low desk) and writing paper box, and lovely small boxes and incense cases, in addition to larger pieces such as bundai, writing paper boxes, and book cases.
We hope that you enjoy those elegant maki-e furnishings that graced Japanese living spaces and daily lives and captured the hearts of many abroad.

Date / Term

February 23, 2019 (Sat.) - May 19, 2019 (Sun.)
10:00~17:00

Closed on Mondays and Tuesdays
*except for National Holidays on Monday or Tuesday
Venue

[Higashiyama-ku]
Kiyomizu sannenzaka museum

3-337-1 kiyomizu sanneizaka kita-iru kiyomizudera-monzen
higashiyama-ku kyoto, 605-0862

*From Kyoto Station, take the Number 206 or 100 buses.
 The nearest bus stop is Kyoto City Bus stop: Kiyomizumichi.
 It's a 7-minute walk from the Kiyomizumichi bus stop.

*By Car: We do not have a parking lot, but there are pay parking lots nearby.
On Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays, please take notice that Sannenzaka Road is closed to all vehicles between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Admission Adults: JPY 800
University, senior high school, and Junior high school student: JPY 500
Elementary school student: JPY 300
Children under elementary school age: Free
URL http://www.sannenzaka-museum.co.jp/index_e.html
Organizer Kiyomizu sannenzaka museum
Contact Tel:075-532-4270 Fax:075-532-4271
E-mail:info@sannenzaka-museum.co.jp

*For more information, please contact the each organizer.

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