Please complete the form to email this item.

Inro

Inro

  • Place of origin:

    Japan (made)

  • Date:

    ca. 1775-1850 (made)

  • Artist/Maker:

    Kajikawa (maker)

  • Materials and Techniques:

    Black, gold, silver and red lacquer

  • Credit Line:

    Pfungst Gift

  • Museum number:

    W.227-1922

  • Gallery location:

    Japan, room 45, case 8

  • Download image

The inro is a container made up of tiers. Japanese men used them because the traditional Japanese garment, the kimono, had no pockets. From the late 1500s onwards, Japanese men wore the inro suspended from their sash by a silk cord and a netsuke (toggle). They originally used it to hold their seal and ink or a supply of medicines. However, it rapidly became a costly fashion accessory of little or no practical use. Most inro are rectangular with gently curving sides.
Most lacquer workers were able to provide basic designs for their own use. From the 1750s onwards, however, customers increasingly demanded interesting and new inro decoration. Lacquer workers often adapted designs from inexpensive woodblock-printed books that were widely available. Both sides of this inro are based on a double-page spread from the book Ehon oshukubai (Pictures of noted poets, birds and flowers). It was illustrated by Tachibana Morikuni and published in 1740. The design shows an historical incident of 1184 at the Uji river. The heroes Sasaki Takatsuna and Kajiwara Kagesue both wanted to be the first to cross the river and engage the enemy in combat. Takatsuna tricked Kagesue into thinking his horse's girth was loose. Here you can see Kagesue stopping to check his girth straps.

Physical description

This inro, of rectangular form and elliptical cross-section, is decorated with Sasaki Takatsuna on his horse's back wading through the water, while Kajiwara Kagesuge on the other bank is checking his horse's girth, in gold, silver, red and black shishiai makie lacquer and kirigane on a black lacquer ground.

Place of Origin

Japan (made)

Date

ca. 1775-1850 (made)

Artist/maker

Kajikawa (maker)

Materials and Techniques

Black, gold, silver and red lacquer

Marks and inscriptions

Kajikawa

Dimensions

Height: 9.6 cm, Width: 6.5 cm, Depth: 3.2 cm

Descriptive line

Inro, black, gold, silver and red lacquer, Kajiwara Kagesue and Sasaki Takatsuna, signed Kajikawa, Japan, ca.1775-1850.

Bibliographic References (Citation, Note/Abstract, NAL no)

Julia Hutt, Japanese Inro, V&A Publications, 1997; plate 78 and 79

Materials

Lacquer

Subjects depicted

Horses; Warrior

Categories

Containers; Accessories; Lacquerware

Collection code

EAS

Download image
Qr_O76300
Ajax-loader