Japanese Lacquer & Metalwork
A Gold Lacquer Box in the Form of a Kaki (Persimmon)
A Gold Lacquer Box in the Form of a Kaki (Persimmon)
Japan, Meiji era (1868-1912)
The piece is made in the form of a ripe persimmon (kaki), with a rounded body gently divided into natural lobes. The surface is finished in gold lacquer, modulated to suggest the varied tones of ripening fruit. The modelling is simple and controlled, relying on the swelling form and slight indentations of the body to convey its natural shape.
The lid is surmounted by a stem, calyx, and two leaves, which form an integral part of the design and serve as the handle. These are rendered with close attention to the structure of the plant, with the leaves showing clearly defined veins and a change in texture from the smooth surface of the fruit itself. A small butterfly is placed on one leaf, inlaid in mother of pearl, providing a delicate point of contrast in both colour and scale. The interior is finished in nashiji, its fine gold flecking offering a subtle richness when the piece is opened.
Significance and Symbolism
The persimmon, or kaki, carries a rich set of associations in Japanese art and culture. As an autumn fruit, it is closely linked to the season itself and to ideas of maturity, fulfilment, and the abundance of the natural world. Its ripening late in the year gives it a particular resonance, suggesting completion, harvest, and the rewarding close of a cycle. In this sense, it is not simply a pleasing natural form, but one that evokes time, seasonality, and the ordered rhythms of nature.
The fruit is also associated with good fortune, longevity, and plenty. Because it ripens generously and is deeply rooted in everyday Japanese life, it came to signify domestic prosperity and the abundance of the cultivated world. When rendered in lacquer with such care and concentration, the persimmon becomes an auspicious subject, one that would have carried both visual appeal and positive symbolic meaning for its owner.
The butterfly introduces a further layer of significance. In Japanese art, butterflies are often associated with elegance, transformation, and the fleeting beauty of life. They can also suggest love, femininity, and the soul. Set against the ripe persimmon and autumn leaves, the butterfly sharpens the seasonal and poetic character of the composition, introducing a sense of transience alongside the fruit’s fuller associations of ripeness and permanence. Together, these motifs create a subtle meditation on abundance and ephemerality, qualities that lie at the heart of much Japanese art.
What is especially effective here is that these meanings are expressed not through elaborate narrative, but through form itself. By making the piece in the shape of a persimmon, and enriching it with the butterfly and leaves, the artist transforms a functional object into something more reflective and suggestive. It becomes not merely an imitation of nature, but an object shaped by auspicious symbolism, seasonal poetry, and close observation.