The art of lacquer painting is one of the many fine arts from the Far East of which we have little knowledge. Here the techniques and processes on which the art is based are discussed.
May 2016
There are many arts practiced in the far east which we rarely encounter here. The term for one of these is familiar enough. We use the word lacquer for highly glassed surfaces where the gloss is hard like glass and makes the colours below glow with a special intensity. This technique originated with the use of the sap from a tree. Câi Sơn or the Son tree (Rhus vernicifera related to the Smoke Bush tree) produces this gum as well as a number of poisonous qualities which mean that some people cannot even brush against its leaves without reacting badly. For many hundreds of years it has been cultivated so that artists and craftsmen could produce paintings, furniture and decorative objects that seem to glow in the dark.
Until I lived in Vietnam I had just used the term lacquer loosely to refer to any high gloss, for I had not experienced the depth and beauty of the original articles from which we have loosely taken the word. When first used our word stood for the varnish made from the gum of the tree, and so the word is also present in Shallac, by the 19th Century it had also become used of mean the wooden and painted objects covered with lacquer and imported from the Far East and India. These objects, pictures and furniture have a surface which seems like glass and which magnifies the colours beneath. In Vietnam this art is used to produce pictures which seem on fire with colour; saturated hues reproducing the heat of a tropical world in a man-made object. Today the technique is being used to great effect by modern artists making panels (for such they nearly always are) on which their art work takes many degrees of abstraction, for the technique inevitably lends itself to the abstract, and less to the literal.
There is a good selection of these paintings in the National Museum of Fine Art in Ha Noi, a building well worth including in your time in Ha Noi as it gives a good snapshot of 20th Century developments in art in Vietnam. There is a book 'Vietnamese Lacquer Painting' by Quang Viet, published by The Fine Arts Publishing House (with an essay in English, although a Vietnamese text) which introduces the subject fully, or you can read an illustrated introduction (in English) to the art by the same author at (http://www.lachonggallery.com/articles/vietnamese_paintings_pioneers.htm). Words come a poor second when trying to convey any technique with which we are unfamiliar. So here I will pass to to the production of lacquer hoping you will hunt out its beauty and extraordinary aesthetic quality for yourself.
Given these two key items: gum and board there are then many materials available which can be employed to produce the required colours and patterning. Two of these are of particular interest. The most typical and seeming eccentric way of obtaining a light surface is with the use of minute particles of egg shells. To get a range of colours a variety of breeds of birds unwittingly contribute their eggs. The surface on which these are to be placed is first reduced by the thickness of the shell with a scraping knife. The area is then covered with a layer of gum and the small shell pieces embedded while it is wet, rather like laying a mosaic in cement. Once in place the pieces are broken further to make sure the surface of the whole is absolutely flat and to produce the fascinating crazed surface that can be seen in many lacquer paintings. The other material used in lacquer work will already to be known to you.
So much for some of the techniques used in producing these lacquer paintings. Now I hope you will seek them out and experience for yourselves the unique depth and intensity of colour that they bring to their subjects.
Go to the previous 'most recently added page'