Tansu
is the traditional mobile storage cabinetry indigenous to Japan. Tansu was first recorded in the Genroku era of the Edo period. The two characters, tan and su, appear to have initially represented objects with separate functions: the storage of food and the carrying of firewood. Since the radical for bamboo appears in each of these characters, it may be conjectured that wood was not as yet used.
During the time period in which tansu gradually became a feature of Japanese culture and daily life, 1657–1923, both hard and softwoods were used by Tansuyas, often in practical combination for a single chest. Woods commonly used in tansu included Keyaki, Kuri, Ezo matsu, Sugi, Kiri and Hinoki.
Many collectors focus on finding genuine antique tansu. There are few workshops producing tansu in imitation of the classic antiques due to the high cost of materials and the very low prices of secondhand tansu. Larger chests are sometimes reduced in size, particularly futon chests, step chests and other chests with deep drawers. Some reproduction tansu have been reproduced in Korea using keyaki veneer.
Historical context
Tansu were rarely used as stationary furniture. Consistent with Japan's minimalist aesthetic, traditional homes appeared rather empty. Tansu were not visible in the home except at certain times for specific situations. They were kept in kura adjacent to homes or businesses, in nando, in oshiire, on choba and on some sengokubune. Mobility was obtained through the use of attached wheels, iron handles for carrying or protruding structural upper rails for lifting.Because the Edo period was feudal in its socio-economic structure, rules concerning ownership dominated all classes from peasant to samurai. Travelling was regulated and conspicuous consumption discouraged through sumptuary laws. Tansu from this time primarily reflect the class and occupation of the owner rather than any regionally inspired originality. With the coming of the Meiji Restoration of imperial authority in 1868, and the gradual disintegration of the rigid class structure, distinctive regional characteristics could now flourish.
Types
Edo period – Class determined
- Choba-dansu: These chests were used by chōnin on the choba to store daifukucho and related business materials. These chests come in many sizes but are usually of only one section with numerous compartments and a wide variety of interior configurations. If visible to the customer, the face wood and hardware could be of high quality to convey a favorable impression.
- Kusuri-dansu: They were apothecary chests with many small drawers to contain medicinal herbs. Because the chests/boxes often needed to be carried by itinerant salesmen, they were often constructed of light weight Kiri.
- Katana-dansu ): They were boxes with several long drawers for the storage of sword blades. They were used primarily by blade polishers. Most often the case wood of choice was Kiri to help protect blades from oxidization in the humid summer months. As well, the light weight of the wood made it easier to move around between samurai customers.
- Kaidan-dansu : These step chests, often of modular construction, incorporated drawers and sliding doors. Though primarily intended as stationary adjuncts to the building architecture, they were designed to be moveable if necessary. In the Tōhoku region north of Tokyo, Kaidan were sometimes positioned in farmhouses for attic access and the seasonal nurturing of silkworms under the thatched roofing. Japanese use of "structural dead space" for storage, thus leaving floor space more open is paralleled in 19th century America by the Shakers.
- Nagamochi Kuruma-dansu: These coffers on wheels are the oldest documented example of Japanese mobile cabinetry. Diaries from a trade delegation to Edo from the Dutch East India settlement on Dejima Island, Nagasaki in March 1657, refer to "big chests on four wheels" that so blocked the roads, people could not escape. What Zacharias Wagenaer and his mission by chance witnessed, has become known as the Great Fire of Meireki in which 107,000 people perished.
- Ryobiraki Kasane-dansu: These chest on chest tansu were used for storage of women's clothing. This design was designated as acceptable for merchant class women under the Kansei Reforms promulgated by the shōguns regent Matsudaira Sadanobu in 1789. In that this style of double door, two section tansu for clothing was already popular in Edo, the limitation to only an unlacquered finish may not have been thought excessive.
Meiji period – Regional diversification
- Sendai Isho-dansu: They were used primarily for out-of-season clothing storage. The finest examples had open-grain Keyaki for the face wood with Sugi for the case. They are characterized by a long top drawer with an elaborated urajyo or a long vertical locking bar. Chests from Sendai were respected for their finely rendered iron hardware, commissioned from former sword fitting craftsmen.
- Yonezawa Isho-dansu: Tucked remotely into the snowy mountains of the Tōhoku region, the castle town of Yonezawa developed a chest on chest style for clothing storage strongly influenced by the refined lacquer finishing techniques of the Mikune area of the Japan Sea coast. The distinctive five petal cherry blossom with an arabesque of ivy engraved lock plate motif and the placement of the kobirakido in the top chest rather than the lower, help to distinguish Yonezawa provenance.
- Kyoto Isho-dansu: This ancient city has been the perceived center of Japanese refined culture since the 9th century, when it was established as the capitol. Tansu in Kyoto style were known for a sophisticated opaque lacquering technique called tama nuri. Lacquered flowers, auspicious symbols and pleasing motifs, well rendered by craftsmen from Wajima on the Noto Peninsula, were a popular status symbol.
- Sado Shima-dansu: These chests were prized as among the finest examples of tansu craftsmanship. With funa-dansu as an experience base, tansuyas in the town of Ogi on Sado Island applied their skill to creating both merchant and clothing chests from the later Edo period. Other than using thick iron hardware incorporating a four diamonds motif cut into the drawer handle back plates, ogi-dansu often evidence ships' cabinet joinery, atypical of other tansu not crafted on the Japan Sea coast. Though late as a production center, tansu makers in the town of Yahata on Sado crafted Kiri chests primarily for the trousseau clothing of merchant families, with unique hardware from the early 20th century.
- Sakai Choba-dansu: Though land-locked now for centuries, Sakai is still thought of as the "port town" for the city of Osaka. The merchant chest design associated with Sakai successfully diffused throughout Japan. Highest quality Sakai Choba are constructed of "unfinished" Hinoki for drawer and door face woods with Sugi for the case. Compartment proportionality, though intricate, is most always visually pleasing.
- Hikone Mizuya-dansu: Although mizuya both of a single section and chest on chest configuration have been crafted to fit into or adjacent to home kitchen alcoves since at least the mid Edo period, the mizuya produced in the town of Hikone on Lake Biwa in Shiga Prefecture deserve particular note. Though copied from Nagoya to Kyoto, the Hikone design, as a uniting of house storage needs and traditional architecture based upon the shaku measurement as standardized in 1891 is to be praised. Using mortise and tenon construction with Hinoki for primary framing, craftsmen cleverly lightened the visual mass of the case by using kijiro nuri finishing for the door and drawer face woods. For the hardware, copper rather than iron was preferred.
- Kuruma Choba-dansu: Chests on wheels, often constructed of the finest woods, became a status symbol for merchants throughout Japan in the Meiji period. Though clearly of Edo-period origin, fear of official censure surely dampened the zeal of potential customers until the 1860s. Although when now seen in Japan in the private collections of proud merchant families, kurumas are displayed in the best tatami matted room of the house, this is not a correct representation. When used for daily business activities to hold account books and impress customers, they were kept on the choba by the owner’s side, quite often chained to a sturdy post.
Funa-dansu
Funa-dansu evolved into three categories of design:
- Kakesuzuri: A seals and money chest with a single hinged door often covered by intricate iron plating, with multiple interior drawers or door covered compartments.
- Hangai: A clothing chest with a single drop-fit door. Often made as a set of two identical chests, designed so one could be placed on top of the other, then locked together.
- Cho-bako: A chest for accounting and writing related materials. Often rendered in many different configurations, some of which included the following features:
- * Kendon-buta: A drop-fit door cut into the case, used to hide a money box.
- * Kobiraki-do: A small swinging door in the lower-right corner.
- * Ryobiraki-do: Double doors with half-faced hinges on the lower half of the box.
- * Dezura hikidashi: One or two drawers, exposed to the exterior.
- * Hiki-do: Removable double sliding doors, running the full width of the box, appearing on the top third or middle third of the box.
- * Zuri-do: Removable single sliding door in the lower half of the box, in the lower-left. Typically appears with a Kobiraki-do.
Types of hardware
Although decorative to the contemporary eye, conditioned by exposure to the refined furniture traditions of China, Britain and Europe, tansu hardware remained largely functional through the Meiji period. Because the joinery of cases was simple and thus flexible to facilitate structural integrity during movement from place to place, hardware placement at vulnerable points was consistent with the need for reliability. Until the introduction of iron plate pressing from England in the 1880s, all iron for hardware was forged. With the introduction of western technology, tansu hardware can now be easily made more decorative with creative embellishments besides being functional.- Herikanagu: Edge hardware, lining the edges and corners of a tansu.
- Obikanagu: "Sash hardware" which spans a face of the tansu, such as the top, or the face of a cabinet door.
- Sumikanagu: Drawer or drawer-corner hardware, appearing at the corners of drawer faces. Generally these match their associated edge hardware.
- Mochiokuri: A carrying handle, generally a loop appearing on the side near the top.
- Sao-toshi: A different type of carrying loop, usually sliding, which was designed to hold a pole when used with its mate on the other side.
- Meita: Lock jamb plate
- Sashikomijo: Sliding-door lock
- Bo: Vertical locking bar
- Hikite: Drawer pull
- Zagane: An "escutcheon", or flange, surrounding the contact point of a drawer pull.
- Toshi-zagane: Back plate for a drawer pull
- Choban: Hinge
- Kasugai: Staple affixing hardware to the wood
- Omotejo: A single-action lock using a split spring for activation. For unlocking only.
- Urajo: A double-action lock mechanism of foreign origin dating from the 1860s.
Finishes