11Story
The Early Collections before the Opening of Japan |
Early examples from the collections of the Museum of Ethnology demonstrate that Japanese ethnographic objects had already been dispersed throughout the world – as far as Brazil and Europe – before the opening of Japan in 1853-54, probably over Nagasaki and the Chinese ports of Canton and Macao.
The aristocrat Karl Alexander von Hügel (1797−1870) brought 200 East Asian objects from his world voyage, largely from China: Hügel visited Canton and Macao in early 1835. Although he did not reach Japan, his collection includes six Japanese objects, among them the bamboo baskets exhibited. |
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Pair of straw sandals © Museum of Ethnology, Vienna |
Japanese bamboo baskets set © Museum of Ethnology, Vienna
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