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  2. Lacquerware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lacquerware

    Lacquerware. Lacquerware are objects decoratively covered with lacquer. Lacquerware includes small or large containers, tableware, a variety of small objects carried by people, and larger objects such as furniture and even coffins painted with lacquer. Before lacquering, the surface is sometimes painted with pictures, inlaid with shell and ...

  3. Carved lacquer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carved_lacquer

    Changfang Pan (rectangular tray) with Sword-Pommel Pattern, black with red layers, Middle Ming, about 1450–1550. Carved lacquer or Qidiao (Chinese: 漆雕) is a distinctive Chinese form of decorated lacquerware. While lacquer has been used in China for at least 3,000 years, [1] the technique of carving into very thick coatings of it appears ...

  4. Coromandel lacquer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coromandel_lacquer

    Coromandel lacquer, probably originally from a screen, worked up into a cabinet for medals in France in the 1720s. Coromandel lacquer is a type of Chinese lacquerware, latterly mainly made for export, so called only in the West because it was shipped to European markets via the Coromandel coast of south-east India, where the Dutch East Indies Company (VOC) and its rivals from a number of ...

  5. Chinese lacquerware table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_lacquerware_table

    Chinese lacquerware table, 1425-1436 V&A Museum no. FE.6:1 to 4-1973. This carved lacquerware table in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London is from the Ming dynasty (1368–1644). It is unique in shape and decoration and is one of the most important objects from the period. It is one of the few surviving examples in the world of a major ...

  6. Chinese ceramics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_ceramics

    Chinese ceramics have had an enormous influence on other ceramic traditions in these areas. Increasingly over their long history, Chinese ceramics can be classified between those made for the imperial court to use or distribute, those made for a discriminating Chinese market, and those for popular Chinese markets or for export. Some types of ...

  7. Chinese furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_furniture

    Chinese furniture is mostly in plain, polished wood, but from at least the Song dynasty, the most luxurious pieces often used lacquer to cover the whole or parts of the visible areas. All the various sub-techniques of Chinese lacquerware can be found on furniture, and became increasingly affordable down the social scale—thus widely used ...

  8. Liangzhu culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liangzhu_culture

    Liangzhu culture. The Liangzhu (/ ˈljɑːŋˈdʒuː /) culture or civilization (3300–2300 BC) was the last Chinese Neolithic jade culture in the Yangtze River Delta. The culture was highly stratified, as jade, silk, ivory and lacquer artifacts were found exclusively in elite burials, while pottery was more commonly found in the burial plots ...

  9. Ryukyuan lacquerware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryukyuan_lacquerware

    Ryukyuan lacquerware. Footed tray, 1700–1800. Ryukyuan lacquerware is one of the chief artistic products of the Ryukyu Islands (today Okinawa Prefecture of Japan), and represents a form and style of lacquerware which is distinct from that of the surrounding cultures. Though distinct in its own ways, it is strongly influenced by Chinese ...