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Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Inro decorated with tanuki and crab, and ojime
Photo: Elizabeth Mann

Inro decorated with tanuki and crab, and ojime

Datelate 19th century
Label TextInro are containers for small personal items such as seals and herbal medicines. Japanese men of the Edo period (1603–1868) wore them hanging on the obi (sash) of their kimono. The small bead called ojime tightens the inro’s cord. Netsuke, intricately carved toggles, were attached at the end of the cord to prevent the inro from slipping through the obi. By the eighteenth century, both inro and netsuke had become more elaborate and decorative and were commissioned by merchants, samurai, and others who could afford them.
Object number91.138
Photo CreditPhoto: Elizabeth Mann
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Rabbit, Cat and Horse; Endearing Creatures in Japanese Art, Dec. 21, 2002 - Mar. 16, 2003. Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Going For Gold, Nov. 3, 2012 - Dec. 8, 2013. Seattle, Washington, Seattle Asian Art Museum, Boundless: Stories of Asian Art, Feb. 8, 2020 - ongoing.
Credit LineGift of the Robert B. and Honey Dootson Collection
Dimensions3 3/4 x 2 3/4 x 1 1/16in.
MediumLacquer and gold
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 35.106
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 35.665
Inro, Ojime and Netsuke
Japanese
18th century
Object number: 52.133
Inro, Ojime and Netsuke
Japanese
mid 18th century
Object number: 55.52
Inro, Ojime and Netsuke
Japanese
ca. 20th century
Object number: 33.326
Inro, Ojime and Netsuke
Japanese
ca. 20th century
Object number: 33.327
Inro, Ojime and Netsuke
Japanese
18th-19th century
Object number: 33.328
Japanese
19th century
Object number: 49.285