An export lacquer medallion

EDO PERIOD, LATE 18TH CENTURY

Details
An export lacquer medallion
Edo period, late 18th Century
Decorated in gold hiramaki-e and kinji on a roironuri ground with a bust portrait of Joseph II Empereur, the reverse with the inscription et Roi des Romains le 18 Août 1765, Né à Vienne le 13 Mars 1741, between a garland and coat-of-arms flanked by crossed banners (minor damage)
12.2 cm. high

Lot Essay

18th Century lacquerware made in Japan for the European market, was probably exclusively exported by the Dutch East Indies Company via Deshima, which had the sole privilege of trade via Japan. Two chief merchants of Deshima, Mr. I. Titsingh and Baron Johan Frederick van Reede tot de Parkeler were especially interested in lacquerwork during the last quarter of the 18th Century. The latter is known to have ordered a few portraits of King Frederic II of Prussia (1712-1786). The portraits were executed in gold on a black ground and oval or square of shape. They were pierced at the top so that they could be hung on a wall. The portraits in this series were modelled after prints illustrated in: L'Europe Illustre, Paris, compiled by Dreux du Radier. They formed part of a larger series in similar style representing famous personalities such as philosophers, artists and statesmen. It has proven impossible to reconstruct these series as most were destroyed during World War II. Though a number of existing ones are signed and dated proving that they were made at Sasaya in Japan between 1787 and 1793.

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