Getting started with the collection:
No image available
A narrow bridge: Japan and the Netherlands from 1600
By
Abstract
A Japanese lacquerwork board inscribed with the name of each Dutch trading post 'opperhoofd' and the number of ships from the Netherlands arriving in Japan each year; a Japanese gold coin stamped with the Dutch lion emblem; Japanese porcelain with a decoration based on a Dutch original design; and ribbons from the wreath laid by the emperor of Japan at the National Monument on Amsterdam's Dam Square in honour of the victims of the Second World War: these are just a few of the objects in the Rijksmuseum collection connected with the shared history of Japan and the Netherlands. For almost 250 years the Netherlands was the sole Western nation permitted by Japan to conduct trade there. In the twentieth century tensions rose between these two colonial powers, and they went to war with one another in Indonesia; in the post-war period the restoration of old ties was a gradual and sometimes fraught process. The objects in the Rijksmuseum testify to this unique and turbulent history, one that has been characterized by admiration and interest, but also misunderstanding and mistrust.
Contributors
Publisher
Publication
- Amsterdam: Rijksmuseum
- Nijmegen: Vantilt, ©2016
Is about
Subject
Related objects
Is about art object
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
9789460042805
Persistent URL
To refer to this object, please use the following persistent URL: