10137

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    Dutch Colonial Double-Sided Gilded Sawasa Box

    Made for the Dutch Colonial Market, most probably in Japan, and possibly Batavia or Tonkin (North Vietnam)
    17th century

    length: 12.9cm, width: 5.8cm, height: 3.6cm, weight: 171g

    Available Enquire

    Provenance

    UK art market

    The shape of this elongated, octagonal box, is based on that of a 17th century Dutch tobacco box. Additionally, the top and bottom edges are bevelled, and the corners are clipped. The box is also double-faced – the top and the bottom are equally decorated, as are the sides.

    Decorated with the sawasa technique (also known as Tonkinware), the box is decorated in black high relief against a gold, tooled ground. Both the top and bottom of the box are decorated densely with Chinese-style settings, with willows, plum blossom sprays and pomegranates. Amid this are Chinese pagodas, and at the base, a boat afloat with two figures. The interior is gilded.

    Most sawasa items were produced in Japan for the Dutch in the 17th and 18th centuries. It is also possible that sawasa items were commissioned by the Dutch from artisans in (or near) Batavia in what was then the Dutch East Indies (largely, modern Indonesia today), or from Tonkin (what is now northern Vietnam). The items were not necessarily made to be sent to Holland but for use by the Dutch who were residing in Asia at the time.

    Sawasa items were made from an alloy of copper with gold, silver and arsenic which were then finished with a surface decoration of black lacquer and mercury fire gilding (gold plating). Sawasa items typically have panels that are chiseled in high relief with intricate patterns and Oriental scenes.

    Related examples of sawasa elongated, octagonal boxes are illustrated in de Bruijn (1998, pp. 62-66).

    The box here is in fine condition and is without dents, splits or repairs. As might be expected for a gilded item intended to be used and which is around three hundred years old, the gilding has wear.

    See another example.

    References

    de Bruijn, M., et alSawasa: Japanese Export Art in Black and Gold, 1650-1800, Rijksmuseum/Waanders Publishers, 1998.

    Veenendaal, J., Asian Art and the Dutch Taste, Waanders Uitgevers Zwolle, 2014.

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