17th century Japanese gold lacquer chest, used as TV stand and bar
"Around 1640, chief of the mission of the Dutch East India Company François Caron commissioned a group of gold lacquer boxes
from the Kaomi Nagashige of Kyoto, a master craftsman who was the
official lacquer-maker to the Tokugawa rulers... Because he was in
Shogun Tokugawa Iemitsu’s good graces, Caron was able to secure the
finest quality of lacquer, the kind of thing that would normally be seen
in the palaces of the Shogun. The chests were decorated with gold,
silver and copper foil, sheets and powder and mother of pearl. The painstaking process of creating these marvels took at least two years... "
...in 1643, the lacquer boxes left Japan for the Netherlands...the
chests passed by descent through the family until they were purchased in
a French Revolutionary fire sale by a haberdasher who sold them to the
wealthy British writer and art collector William Beckford....
[A] Polish doctor named Zaniewski...bought it from the Cory auction for a pittance. In 1970, Dr. Zaniewski sold the chest for £100 to a tenant of his, a French engineer who worked for Shell Petroleum. The
engineer used it as a TV stand in his South Kensington apartment for 16
years, then brought it with him when he retired to the Loire Valley in
1986. There he used it as a bar...
At the June 9th auction held at the Château de Cheverny in the Loire Valley, the Mazarin Chest sold for 7.3 million euros ($9,544,000)...
Further detaiils at
The History Blog.
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