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Antique
Collecting: Ivory
Ivory has been used
for making works of art from Biblical
times onwards. The comparative ease with
which it can be manipulated and its
durable nature have always attracted
craftsmen of all nations, and the latter
quality has led to the preservation of a
surprisingly large number of ancient
examples. While the principal pieces
made prior to the seventeenth century
are now in museums, occasional examples
appear on the market and fetch high
prices. They are usually pieces with
religious significance: leaves of small
folding altar-pieces (diptyches) carved
finely with scenes from the life of
Christ or with the history of a saint.
More within the reach of the collector
are figures. If European they date
mostly from the mid-seventeenth century,
but are later when Oriental. German
carvers were prolific workers, and their
output was rivalled only by that of
Flanders where the sculptor Francois
Duquesnoy (known as II Fiammingo)
influenced many craftsmen. J. C. L. Luck
made figures in ivory and also modelled
in porcelain for the Meissen and other
factories, and a number of porcelain
groups and figures owe their origin to
him and his fellow craftsmen in ivory.
The range of articles made from ivory is
very wide: large tankards heavily carved
with numerous mythological figures and
set off with elaborate silver mounts,
snuff-boxes, tobacco-rasps for grating
the 'noxious weed' to make snuff,
candlesticks, and both religious and
secular figures and groups, to name only
a few.
Both the Chinese and Japanese were
skilful carvers of ivory, and the former
had two main centres of production:
Peking and
Canton. At the latter were made many of
the pieces which have been described as
being 'more distinguished for bizarre
complexity of pattern than for artistic
feeling'. To that category belong the
familiar 'concentric balls'; those
ingenious collections of balls, loosely
one inside the other and all of them
painstakingly carved and pierced from a
single piece of ivory.
The carvings made by the Japanese are
well known for their meticulous detail,
often carried to extremes. They vary in
size from several inches in height to
the miniature netsuke. The latter were
used ceremonially to hold the inro (or
small medicine box) suspended from the
girdle of the kimono by a silk cord, and
their design is infinitely varied. The
finest are the work of men who
specialized in making them and the
ingenuity of their design is matched by
an exquisite finish.
During the past hundred years many
reproductions of European ivories of all
periods have been made, and it is true
to say that a large number of the pieces
thought to be antique (and shown as such
with pride in the cabinets of
collectors) are no more than a century
or so old. Equally, but in more recent
years, netsuke have been copied in great
numbers, not only in ivory and similar
materials that resemble it, but also in
such entirely worthless substances as
celluloid. The modern imitations of both
Eastern and Western work show few signs
of the great care and skill used in
making the original pieces. Further,
they have usually been smeared copiously
with brown stain and dirt to simulate
the dust of ages and hide their casual
execution.
Other animal and vegetable substances
These include a number that resemble
ivory more or less closely: the teeth of
the hippopotamus, walrus, narwhal, and
sperm-whale, and the bones of animals.
From the latter, Napoleonic prisoners of
war held captive in England constructed
models of sailing ships. Many of them
were extremely well made, especially
when the conditions in which the
craftsmen lived and the lack of suitable
tools and materials are considered.
Models of guillotines were made also by
the same men, but these are
understandably less popular with
collectors.
The horn of the rhinoceros was esteemed
by the Chinese for use in preparing
medicines and also, when in the form of
a drinking-vessel, for the testing of
liquids. If poison was present it was
said that a white liquid would become
visible. Be that as it may, the Chinese
craftsmen skilfully carved cups from the
brown horn, which acquires an attractive
dull sheen with age, and made elaborate
blackwood stands to bear them.
Tortoiseshell was known and valued by
the Romans, and in more modern times was
much used as a veneer on furniture in
combination with brass; a type of
ornamentation perfected by the French
cabinet-maker A. C. Boulle at the end of
the seventeenth century. During the
nineteenth century, tortoiseshell was
often used for veneering small articles,
pin-boxes and tea-caddies being
particularly favoured. Like horn, it was
moulded and carved both in Europe and
the Far East, and it has been imitated
with varying success in celluloid and
other transparent materials.
Mother-of-pearl is the lustrous
pearl-like inner lining of many
seashells. It is found all over the
world, but shells from tropical waters
are esteemed because of their large
size. Complete shells were carved with
religious and other scenes, tea-caddies
were covered with the material, and the
Chinese made many thousands of gambling
counters from it. These were of various
shapes and each was carefully engraved.
Mother-of-pearl was employed as an inlay
from the seventeenth century, both in
wood and lacquer, and in Victorian times
was inset in black japanned and gilt
furniture, tea trays and other objects.
An unusual technique was to inset minute
pieces of it, carefully arranged in a
pattern, into black lacquer covering a
vase or a bowl of Chinese porcelain.
This was done in the Far East in the
eighteenth century, and such decoration
is termed 'lac burgauté'.
Books
English ivory-carvings are the subject
of English Ivories by M. H.
Longhurst (1926), and there are other
works in foreign languages dealing with
the work of Continental craftsmen.
Japanese netsuke are described and
illustrated in Netsuke, by A.
Brockhaus, written in German and
published in Leipzig in 1905, and The
Art of the Netsuke Carver, by F.
Meinertzhagen, London, 1956.
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