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What Is Maki-e ?

I've been researching and buying and selling maki-e items for so
long that when I am asked a simple question like "what is maki-e",
I am reminded, that not everyone is an advanced collector. We all
start from the beginning and several years back, I too knew next
to nothing about maki-e. So this page is a little introduction for
the new people.
Maki-e is an ancient Japanese art form, thought to have originally
been brought over from China during the Heian period (794-1185)
and further developed by the Japanese artists. The Japanese word
'Makie' literally means "sprinkled picture" and involves
the sprinkling of gold or silver dust over a design that has been
drawn in lacquer while it is still damp and sticky. Japanese lacquer
is traditionally made from the Japanese Urushi tree, a specises
of tree that is closely related to poison ivy. As you can imagine,
working with traditional urushi lacquer is not always pleasant,
it can cause rashes and swelling if it comes into contact with the
artists skin. I've taken maki-e lessons, and I can testify to this.
Today, synthetic lacquers are often used to avoid the toxic effects
of working in traditional urushi lacquer.
Fountain pens are not traditional Japanese items, and maki-e artists
were not thrilled about working on these. Namiki Ryouske, the founder
of Pilot pens had been working on ways to prevent hard rubber pens
from oxydizing - turning dull brown from setting in the sun. His
soulution was to coat the pens with urushi lacquer. After successfully
mastering this, he had artists brought in and created traditonal
maki-e artwork on these pens. It became a sense of pride for the
Japanese that their art was being sought after by foreign markets
and Namkiki used this fact to recruit some of the top maki-e artists.
Maki-e artwork makes use of many techniques. Here are some of the
basic ones explained.
Hiramaki-e: A relativlely flat finish lacquer work. A few layers
over the base pen, then the art design layers and a final clear
layer for protection.
Togidashi: layers of gold dust, often in different grades and colors
Takamaki-e A high relief finish, created by building up layers
of lacquer to desired areas.
Any questions? Please send an e-mail to: rd@kamakurapens.com |