Inro thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at Young V&A
Play Gallery, Mini Museum, Case 21

Inro

ca. 1775 - 1850 (made)
Artist/Maker

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.
Lacquer was most commonly used in the manufacture of inro since it was highly suitable for storing medicines. Lacquer is the sap from the tree Rhus verniciflua that grows mainly in East Asia. After processing, it is applied in many thin layers to a base material. The craft of lacquering, as well as making inro bodies, is highly complex, time-consuming and expensive.
This inro is decorated with a shishi (lion-dog) on one side and a pine tree on the other. Unusually the design is carried out in the basic, but comparatively rare, technique of lacquer painting in black on a plain red lacquer ground.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Blacquer lacquer painting on a red lacquer ground
Brief description
Inro depicting a shishi (lion-dog) in black lacquer painting on a red l;acquer ground, ca. 1775 - 1850
Dimensions
  • Height: 7.4cm
  • Width: 4.3cm
  • Depth: 2.3cm
Style
Credit line
Sage Memorial Gift
Subject depicted
Summary
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.
Lacquer was most commonly used in the manufacture of inro since it was highly suitable for storing medicines. Lacquer is the sap from the tree Rhus verniciflua that grows mainly in East Asia. After processing, it is applied in many thin layers to a base material. The craft of lacquering, as well as making inro bodies, is highly complex, time-consuming and expensive.
This inro is decorated with a shishi (lion-dog) on one side and a pine tree on the other. Unusually the design is carried out in the basic, but comparatively rare, technique of lacquer painting in black on a plain red lacquer ground.
Associated objects
Collection
Accession number
W.214-1921

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Record createdFebruary 20, 2006
Record URL
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