Lacquer is a natural substance obtained from the
lacquer tree which has its home in China, a country
still leading the world in lacquer resources. Much of
the country is suitable for growing the tree, but most
of the output comes from five provinces-Shaanxi, Hubei,
Sichuan, Guizhou and Yunnan.
Raw lacquer is the sap of the lacquer tree, which hardens
in contact with air. A tree becomes productive 3-5 years
after planting, and entails hard work on the part of
the tapper. He can only get the latex in June and July
each year and must tap it in the predawn hours before
the cock's crow and sunrise. For the sun would reduce
the moisture in the air, stopping the flow of the latex.
Lacquerware
has a long history which extends back to the remote
ages in China. From the neolithic remains at Tuanjie
Village and Meiyan Township (both in Wujiang County,
Jiangsu Province) were unearthed in 1955 a number of
lacquer-painted black pottery objects, two of which,
a cup and a pot, were discovered intact and found to
bear patterns painted in lacquer after the objects had
been fired. They are the earliest lacquered articles
ever discovered in China and are now kept in the Museum
of Nanjing.
Before the invention of the Chinese ink, lacquer had
been used for writing. Twenty-eight bamboo clips found
in a Warring States (475-221 B. C. ) tomb at Changtaiguan,
Xinyang, Henan Province, bear a list of the burial objects
with the characters written in lacquer.
Lacquerware is moisture-proof, resistant to heat, acid
and alkali, and its colour and lustre are highly durable,
adding beauty to its practical use. Beijing, Fuzhou
and Yangzhou are the cities leading in the production
of Chinese lacquerware.
The making of Beijing lacquerware starts with a brass
or wooden body. After preparation
and polishing, it is coated with several dozen up to
hundreds of layers of lacquer, reaching a total thickness
of 5 to 18 millimetres. Then, gravers will cut into
the hardened lacquer, creating "carved paintings"
of landscapes, human figures, flowers and birds. It
is then finished by drying and polishing. Traditional
Beijing lacquer objects are in the forms of chairs,
screens, tea tables, vases, etc. Emperor Qianlong of
the Qing Dynasty, an enthusiast for lacquerware, had
his coffin decorated with carved lacquer.
Yangzhou
lacquer articles are distinguished not only by carvings
in relief but by exquisite patterns inlaid with gems,
gold, ivory and mother of pearl. The products are normally
screens, cabinets, tables, chairs, vases, trays, cups,
boxes and ashtrays.
Fuzhou is well-known for the "bodiless lacquerware",
one of the "Three Treasures" of Chinese arts
and crafts (the other two being Beijing cloisonne and
Jingdezhen porcelain).
The bodiless lacquerware starts with a body of clay,
plaster or wood. Grass linen or silk is pasted onto
it, layer after layer, with lacquer as the binder. The
original body is removed after the outer cloth shell
has dried in the shade. This is then smoothed with putty,
polished, and coated with layers of lacquer. After being
carved with colourful patterns, it becomes the bodiless
lacquerware of extremely light weight and exquisite
finish.

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