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里芋菊蒔絵重箱|Stacked Food Box (Jūbako) with Taro Plants and Chrysanthemums

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Summary

Public domain photo of a golden object, Japan, free to use, no copyright restrictions image - Picryl description

Jubako are used for take-away meals as bento, or for the traditional Japanese New Year meal of osechi ryori. The osechi ryori dishes served in a jubako are deeply symbolic, as is the actual use of the jubako box - the box has several tiers, symbolising the 'layering of luck and happiness'. Traditionally, a jubako for osechi has five shelves, but only the top four are filled. The bottom tier is empty and is used to "receive blessings from the gods". In recent years, however, three-tier jubakos have become increasingly popular. Filling a jubako with five, seven or nine kinds of food is believed to bring good luck, as 5, 7 and 9 are lucky numbers in Japanese culture.

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Tags

asian art shibata zeshin boxes gold lacquer metal silver wood asia shibata zeshin 1807 1891 stacked food box taro plants flowers mary griggs burke collection gift of the mary and jackson burke foundation late edo early meiji period stacked food box jubako taro plants chrysanthemums high resolution ultra high resolution 3 d object metropolitan museum of art japanese art
date_range

Date

1834 - 1866
collections

in collections

Jubako

Tiered boxes used to hold and present food in Japan.
create

Source

Metropolitan Museum of Art
link

Link

https://www.metmuseum.org/
copyright

Copyright info

Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication ("CCO 1.0 Dedication")

label_outline Explore Taro Plants, Stacked Food Box, Late Edo Early Meiji Period

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asian art shibata zeshin boxes gold lacquer metal silver wood asia shibata zeshin 1807 1891 stacked food box taro plants flowers mary griggs burke collection gift of the mary and jackson burke foundation late edo early meiji period stacked food box jubako taro plants chrysanthemums high resolution ultra high resolution 3 d object metropolitan museum of art japanese art