laque burgauté

laque burgauté

also spelled  Lac Burgauté,  
 in the decorative arts, East Asian technique of decorating lacquer ware with inlaid designs employing shaped pieces of the iridescent blue-green shell of the sea-ear (Haliotis). This shell inlay is sometimes engraved and occasionally combined with gold and silver. Workmanship is exquisite; therefore, laque burgauté is principally used to decorate such small-scale objects as tiny boxes, miniature table screens, vases, and especially little silver-lined wine cups, usually made in sets of five.

      Laque burgauté seems to have originated in China, with examples occurring as early as the Ming dynasty (1368–1644), and was especially popular in the Ch'ing dynasty (1644–1911/12), when it was also used to cover unglazed porcelain. It was widely used by Japan craftsmen in the Tokugawa (Edo) period (1603–1867). In China this technique is referred to as lo tien, and in Japan it is called aogai. Like many of the artistic techniques and objects imported into 17th- and 18th-century Europe from eastern Asia, the Western name is derived from the French—sea-ear (burgau) lacquer (laque, or lac).

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • LAQUE BURGAUTÉ — Ce terme, qui provient de burgau , nom vulgaire de diverses coquilles nacrées, désigne des laques unis, ou des porcelaines laquées, incrustés de nacre. Il a été créé par Jacquemart et Le Blant (Histoire artistique commerciale et industrielle de… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • lacquerwork — Any of a variety of decorative objects or surfaces, usually of wood, to which a coloured, highly polished, and opaque type of varnish called lacquer has been applied. True lacquerwork is Chinese or Japanese in origin. The technique was copied in… …   Universalium

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