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Lacquer Box Guide
Russian lacquer boxes are among the most beautiful and distinctive of that
country's art achievements in the 20th century. The boxes feature
intricately hand-drawn miniature paintings based on a variety of themes,
including fairy tales, poems, country life, troikas, landscapes, battle
scenes, and old art masterpieces. They get their name from the many layers
of lacquer (most often, black and red) that are applied to both their
outside and inside sections. Coats of clear lacquer, or varnish, are the
last layers to be put on and provide a stunning shine to the box.
The boxes, which vary in size, are extremely well
crafted. It can take as long as two months to make a
box out of papier-mache, a material many artists
prefer because of its ability to withstand changes
in atmospheric conditions and to avoid cracking.
Lacquer artists must not only excel artistically,
but must also have the patience to spend long
stretches of time working on the many small
intricate sections of their composition. Artists
will typically use strong magnifying glasses on
these spots and very fine brushes made out of a
squirrel's tail.
The boxes most widely sought after come from one of
four small Russian villages - Palekh, Fedoskino,
Kholui, and Mstera. Special schools have been
established at these places where artists train for
four years before they become members of each
village's art community.
Artists from Fedoskino, the birthplace of Russian
lacquer miniatures, use a more realistic style of
painting than the other villages. They also use oil
paints for their drawings instead of the egg-based
temperas. Three to four layers of the oil paints,
along with seven coats of lacquer, are applied to
each box before it is completed. This layering
brings out a radiant quality in the drawings and the
colors seem to emanate from within. Sometimes, an
underlay of gold leaf or mother of pearl enhances
this radiance and adds a lovely iridescence of its
own.
Lacquer boxes from Palekh might well enjoy the
highest world-wide acclaim. The lacquer art of
Palekh has been called "a small miracle", a label
particularly fitting since that the village
specialized in icon-painting for centuries until the
1917 Russian revolution. To many collectors, Palekh
boxes have the most elegant look to them. When you
hold one in your hand, you know you are holding
something truly special. Most often in Palekh works,
innumerable fine lines of gold leaf, polished to a
glow by a wolf's tooth, are applied to the
ornamental border and drawing itself. A simple
one-color background then provides a beautiful
contrast to the gold leaf and scene itself. This
background, usually black, also serves to take the
observer into a new world where one's concept of
time and space is left to the imagination.
The village of Kholui, meanwhile, began painting
lacquer miniatures in the 1930's, later than Palekh
and much later than Fedoskino, where this art began
in the 18th century. Perhaps because of the late
start, Kholui artists are less bound to tradition or
one particular style than the other villages, and
seem to take a bolder approach to their works.
Backgrounds for Kholui works are occasionally one
solid color (like Palekh), but more often than not
the artist fills this area with swirls of tone and
shade. Partly for this reason, Kholui works appear
brighter than Palekh boxes and seem to fill up more
of the available space.
Boxes from Mstera, though, usually have the lightest
colors. Artists there almost never choose black for
their backgrounds, and instead use light blue, pink,
gold or ivory colors. With the addition of these
colors, landscapes generally play a more prominent
role in Mstera works, and people and objects tend to
take a place within the background setting rather
than remain separate from it. In Mstera, a wide
range of artistic talent exists. While some artists
paint dynamic and elaborate scenes from fairy tales
or famous battles, others concentrate on exquisite
floral designs.
Above text on villages is used by permission of
www.lacquerbox.com. |