Dressed to Impress: Adornment in Early Modern Japan

event image for Dressed to Impress: Adornment in  Early Modern Japan
Date: 10 November 2017
Time: 19:00 - 20:00
Location: BRLSI
Admission: Public £6; Friends/Students £3

Speaker: Dr Nicole Rousmaniere (IFAC Handa Curator of Japanese Arts, British Museum)
Netsuke (toggles), literally meaning ‘root’ (ne) ‘to attach’ (tsuke), are a form of Japanese miniature sculpture that was primarily functional. Used by men during the Edo period (1615-1868) to fasten tobacco, money and medicine pouches to their sashes, netsuke expressed the owner’s style and financial status. Netsuke can be viewed as a form of conspicuous consumption in an age of sumptuary laws and strict social class boundaries. This talk examines the important role of decoration in Japan as a social signifier from the Muromachi period (1336-1573) through to the early Meiji era (1868-1912).

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Chinese couple playing a flute. Japan, about 1700
©The Trustees of the Bristish Museum

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Add to your Calendar 10 November 2017 19:00 10 November 2017 20:00 Europe/London [MEAA] Dressed to Impress: Adornment in Early Modern Japan

Speaker: Dr Nicole Rousmaniere (IFAC Handa Curator of Japanese Arts, British Museum)
Netsuke (toggles), literally meaning ‘root’ (ne) ‘to attach’ (tsuke), are a form of Japanese miniature sculpture that was primarily functional. Used by men during the Edo period (1615-1868) to fasten tobacco, money and medicine pouches to their sashes, netsuke expressed the owner’s style and financial status. Netsuke can be viewed as a form of conspicuous consumption in an age of sumptuary laws and strict social class boundaries. This talk examines the important role of decoration in Japan as a social signifier from the Muromachi period (1336-1573) through to the early Meiji era (1868-1912).

Supported by:

British Museum logo

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