Inro with temple gate and Nio guardian figures
Artist
Kajikawa Bunryusai
(Japanese, active 18th and early 19th centuries)
Place of OriginJapan
Dateapprox. 1750-1820
PeriodEdo period (1615–1868)
MaterialsWood with lacquer, lead, copper, gold, and mother-of-pearl
DimensionsH. 9.4 cm x W. 9.2 cm x D. 3.0 cm
Credit LineThe Avery Brundage Collection
Object numberB70Y1459
DepartmentJapanese Art
ClassificationsDecorative Arts
On View
On viewLocationGallery 27
More InformationInro and Netsuke
An inro (“seal casket”) is a small tiered container that would be suspended on a silk cord from the sash of a man’s kimono. A netsuke threaded onto this cord served as a toggle, and a movable bead would keep the inro closed. Inro were used to hold not only personal seals— which function in East Asian cultures in much the same way signatures do in the West—but also other small items such as medicines. Many inro are decorated using the Japanese lacquer technique called makie in which fine powder of gold or other metals is sprinkled on wet lacquer to create intricate pictorial motifs.
Kitamura Shunsho
approx. 1900-1939
1800-1868
approx. 1675-1725
Yamamura Shinya