Publication of “Japanese Lacquerwork and Crafrtspersons in Thailand – Study of the Japan-made Lacquerwork Found in Thailand (2) –”

Cover of the publication
Figures in the publication (items in the maki-e toolbox formerly owned by Mr. Miki Sakae)
Japan-made Lacquered door panels of Wat Ratchapradit

 At the Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, we have been conducting research on cultural properties located in Thailand in cooperation with the Fine Arts Department, Ministry of Culture, Thailand since 1992. Since 2011, the Tokyo National Research Institute for Cultural Properties has been involved in the research of the Japan-made lacquered door panels of Wat Ratchapradit, a first-grade royal temple in Bangkok, providing technical support for a full-scale restoration project of the panels that the Fine Arts Department is currently organizing.

 Apart from the lacquered door panels, in Thailand other examples of Japan-made lacquerware can be seen at libraries, museums, temples, palaces and other locations. The exchange between Japan and Thailand in the field of lacquering was not limited to the trade of goods. King Rama V’s profound fascination with Japanese maki-e art prompted him to dispatch Thai students to Japan to master the intricacies of this technique. He also invited Mr. TSURUHARA Zenzaburo to Thailand to gild the principal Buddha statue of Wat Benchamabophit, a first-grade royal temple, with gold leaf. In another example of cultural exchange, Mr. MIKI Sakae had been involved in production and restoration of lacquerwork for over 30 years in Thailand, from 1911, as an expert of the present Fine Arts Department.

 Our book titled “Japanese Lacquerwork and Crafrtspersons in Thailand – Study of the Japan-made Lacquerwork Found in Thailand (2) –”, published in March 2025, summarizes the research results on Japanese lacquerware found in Thailand, photographs taken in Thailand documenting such lacquerware, as well as the above-mentioned Japanese craftspersons who worked in Thailand, conducted to date by Japanese and Thai researchers involved in the joint study. These findings provide new insights into the exchange between the two countries in the field of lacquering; and are also useful for understanding the significance of the door panels of Wat Ratchapradit in the history of lacquering, as well as in the history of exchange between Japan and Thailand.

 This book is available in public libraries in Japan and some overseas libraries that handle work on Japanese art. As this book presents only a small portion of the Japanese lacquerwork in Thailand, more and more documentary materials on Japanese lacquer craftspersons are being discovered, and therefore experts will continue to study these topics and publish the results.

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