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techniques, which had been influenced by objects imported from China and Korea, for the Mendicant Orders, or believed to be associated with such and order, have been
and developed a new style of urushi lacquer for export, known as Namban, most likely recorded thus far. These pieces are all in monasteries and convents in Spain. The most
to speed up the production process and to lower the cost, which consisted in reducing important example, providing tangible evidence of an order made for the Dominicans,
or totally omitting the textile layers on the base or edges, and the use of relatively is a lectern bearing the monogram of the Order of Saint Dominic decorated in Namban
simple lacquer techniques. style and dating to the Momoyama period. Friars of these Mendicant Orders, as shown
The Jesuit textual sources and extant liturgical lacquers discussed above above, also helped in further establishing diplomatic relations between Japan and the
demonstrate that the lacquer craftsmen made a wide variety of hybrid objects for rulers and clergy of Western Europe, as well as those representing the Spanish Crown
the Jesuits, which combined a European or Indo-Portuguese shape, and the ‘IHS’ in New Spain, in the early seventeenth century. A Franciscan friar, for instance, was
monogram of the Society of Jesus or other motifs embedded with Christian symbolism, appointed ambassador of the second Japanese delegation to Europe, which was sent via
with a new urushi lacquer style depicting dense compositions of Japanese flowering or New Spain to the royal court of Madrid and the Vatican.
fruiting plants, birds, animals (both real and mythical) in gold and silver makie most The extant liturgical lacquers decorated in the so-called Transition style with
probably based on paintings made by the Kanō school, but with a horror vacui and the ‘IHS’ monogram still found in monasteries or convents in Portugal and Spain
lavish use of mother-of-pearl inlay (raden) which were alien to Japanese aesthetics. In demonstrate that despite the severity of the Christian persecution, the Jesuits and
addition, the Jesuits ordered laquer objects that could have been used both in religious missionaries of the Mendicant Orders (Franciscans, Augustinians and Dominicans)
and secular contexts, some with the ‘IHS’ monogram. These included objects such as present in Japan at the time continued to order liturgical lacquers in the early Edo
writing boxes that combined a traditional Japanese shape and finest lacquer techniques period up until about 1639, when the country was closed to all Europeans (sakoku).
with the ‘IHS’ monogram. Such fine and expensive liturgical lacquers would most It is not possible to ascertain exactly how all these liturgical lacquers arrived at their
probably have been intended for personal use or to give as gifts to powerful daimyō, destinations in the Iberian Peninsula and New World. It is clear, however, that they
who had converted to Christianity and supported their mission in Japan. It also circulated via the Portuguese trans-Atlantic trade route through Macao and Goa, or via
included low, rectangular tables that were most probably used as portable altars in the Spanish trans-Pacific trade route through Manila to Acapulco, and subsequently
Japan. It seems reasonable to believe that the extant liturgical lacquers with Christian the trans-Atlantic trade route through Veracruz to Seville. Other extant liturgical
iconography that would not have been immediately recognizable by the Tokugawa lacquers housed in public and private collections around the world suggest that a
shogunate, or no Christian iconography at all, began to be made to order for the Jesuits number of such lacquers were taken from Japan by Christian missionaries as well as by
after the anti-Christian edict of 1597, which caused the execution of missionaries for Japanese converts who sought refuge abroad.
preaching Christianity.
The lacquer decoration of the liturgical lacquers made to order with the ‘IHS’ Lacquer for the Portuguese and Spanish markets [4.1.1.2]
monogram in the early Edo period, as shown earlier, was also executed in the so- It is well known that Portuguese merchants brought with them a variety of European
called Transition style with an even simpler, less time-consuming technique depicting models of portable furniture to the Far East. By the time of their arrival in Japan
large-scale flowers and autumn grasses in flat gold and silver hiramakie on a plain in 1543, the Portuguese were already familiar with the mother-of-pearl objects from
black lacquer ground, and details incised by needle drawing (harigaki), which imitated the coastal region of Gujarat in western India, as well as with lacquer objects from
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the Kodaiji makie style introduced by the workshops of the Kōami family of Miyako China, which had been imported in small quantities to the Iberian Peninsula, since the
for the domestic market in the late sixteenth century. The liturgical lacquer objects early sixteenth century. The Portuguese merchants, whose commercial activities in
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decorated in the hybrid Namban or the so-called Transition styles discussed above, and Hirado and later Nagasaki supported the Jesuit mission, noticed that Japanese lacquer
a considerable number of others that are still found today in churches, monasteries and for export was of superior quality and thus began to order lacquer objects intended
convents in both Portugal and Spain, demonstrate that the majority of the liturgical 129 By the early sixteenth century, Gujarat was the centre for the Portuguese secular market, which would have been useful for private use in
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of production of mother-of-pearl objects, either
lacquers were made for the Jesuits. This is not surprising as they were not only the first inlaid entirely with pieces of mother-of-pearl or with a European context or in their settlements in Asia that had hot and humid climates.
Christian missionaries to arrive in Japan, but also those who being sponsored by the black lac (generally known as black mastic or Gujarat Some of the portable furniture they took to Japan served as models to the lacquer
lac) and mother-of-pearl overlaid decoration, for
Portuguese Crown were able to remain there for a longer period of time. Jesuit textual both the local and export markets, including Turkey, craftsmen, particularly those working in and around Miyako, who made new types of
the Middle East and Europe. For a discussion on the
sources and these extant objects attest to the direct involvement of the Jesuits in such objects made in Gujarat for the Portuguese market furniture and utilitarian objects using both local materials and decorative techniques.
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liturgical lacquer orders, unlike those made to order for them in Chinese porcelain and two examples of black mastic and mother- The exact date when such lacquers were first made proves difficult to ascertain. It is
of-pearl objects, see Vinhais and Welsh, 2009,
at the same time discussed in Chapter III, which reflect the indirect nature of orders pp. 54–75, nos. 3 and 4. likely that they were being made by the early Momoyama period, possibly shortly
130 The lacquer mentioned in Portuguese and Spanish
placed through Chinese junk traders who acted as middleman between the Jesuits and written sources of the early to mid-sixteenth after c.1580 when liturgical lacquers are believed to have been first made, and that
porcelain potters. century, including inventories and letters, was most production continued until the expulsion of the Portuguese and Christian missionaries
likely Chinese or Indo-Portuguese. Impey and Jörg,
From the beginning of the seventeenth century a small number of liturgical 2005, pp. 11 and 284. As Moura Carvalho has noted from Japan in 1639, in the early Edo period. Initially all these pieces of portable
the furniture brought to Japan by the Black Ship
lacquers were also made to order for friars of the Agustinian and Dominican Mendicant depicted in Namban folding screens appears to be furniture and utilitarian objects were decorated in the Namban style created by the
all of Chinese origin. Moura Carvalho, 2013, p. 39.
Orders, or even for private individuals, who may never have actually served in Japan, 128 A number of other liturgical lacquers in religious 131 The region of Miyako, as Curvelo has noted, appears lacquer craftsmen for the liturgical lacquers made for the Jesuits, with had a rich
institutions in Portugal are discussed in Mendes
to be sent as gifts to these religious institutions or to members of the nobility in the Pinto, 1990; and d’Oliveira Martins, 2010. Others to have been one of the main production centres of mixture of Japanese and European and/or Indo-Portuguese influences. By the early
in religious institutions in Spain are discussed in lacquer made to order for the Portuguese. Curvelo,
Iberian Peninsula and/or New Spain. Only a few extant liturgical lacquers made to order Kawamura, 2013. 2010, p. 23. Edo period, as occurred with the liturgical lacquers discussed in the previous section of
348 Silk, Porcelain and Lacquer Trade in Japanese Lacquer 349