Analytical Methods Committee, AMCTB No. 116
First published on 10th June 2025
Asian lacquerware, renowned for the durability, lustre and cultural significance of its decorative layers, often needs to be studied in terms of its composition, production techniques and degradation processes. In traditional recipes, lacquer is applied as a coating on the surface of a substrate, and is often mixed with additives such as pigments or overlaid with metal powders and inlays. As a result of this intrinsic complexity, the technical examination and scientific analysis of Asian lacquerware encompasses techniques that target both the organic matrix and the inorganic components. Although the techniques mentioned here can be and are used to analyse organic coatings in general, this Technical Brief focuses on Asian lacquerware due to its particular complexity.
In the 17th century, the exceptional aesthetic and mechanical properties of the natural East Asian material became known to the Western world, gaining sudden popularity. However, the material was poorly understood, and European craftspeople began to reproduce the glossy surfaces using local resins and oils, such as dammar, mastic, linseed oil, etc. These imitations, known as japanning, vernis Martin and lacca povera, for example, can be difficult to distinguish from original Asian productions without chemical analysis.
In the past, it had been assumed that objects would be made of the type of lacquer locally available. However, it has been recently shown that lacquer travelled widely and crossed national borders, and some objects contain more than one type of sap.
Other materials are also reported to be occasionally mixed with lacquer to possibly adjust its rheological or adhesive properties. These include oils, proteins, starch, rape seeds, tofu, egg white and animal glue. The preparation layers can also contain pigs’ blood, textile fibres, charred sawdust and starch, among other materials. The decorative layers can also be decorated with metals and mother-of-pearl inlays, and gold, silver and tin leaf and powder.2
• X-ray radiography and computed tomography (CT) are valuable for studying the entire construction of lacquered objects, providing insights into their sub-structures, shedding light on the manufacturing process and revealing possible hidden damage, structural issues and repairs.
• X-ray fluorescence (XRF) provides information on the elemental composition and spatial distribution of the inorganic components of lacquer decorations, for example, pigments, mother-of-pearl and metal inlays.
• Spectroscopic techniques, such as fibre optic reflectance spectroscopy (FORS) and Raman spectroscopy, are valuable tools for the identification of the pigments and other materials that are mixed with the surface lacquer layers.
• Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) of samples provides additional information on the technology of lacquer decoration and shows the features of layers in cross sections in a way that is complementary to that provided by optical microscopy (Fig. 4). When coupled with energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry (EDX), SEM-EDX also provides information on the elemental composition of the inorganic materials possibly present in the lacquer layers, such as additives and pigments.
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Fig. 4 SEM image overlayed with an optical photomicrograph of a cross section showing the stratigraphy of a lacquer coating sample from a Japanese chest from the collection of the Museum of Zaragoza (Spain). Reprinted from D. Tamburini, et al., J. Anal. Appl. Pyrolysis, 2020, 151, 104905, with permission from Elsevier.3 |
• Raman spectroscopy can be used on cross sections for the identification of pigments, inorganic materials and some dyes (such as indigo) mixed within the lacquer and foundation layers (Fig. 5).
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Fig. 5 Raman spectra of pigments used in admixture with lacquer in various Burmese lacquerwares from the British Museum collection. Adapted from D. Tamburini, et al., Heritage Sci., 2019, 7(1), 28, published under CC-BY-4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).4 |
• Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy can be used to identify some of the materials in lacquerware but does not easily differentiate among the three Asian lacquers. However, it can help in differentiating ‘true’ Asian lacquer from European imitations.
• X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), time-of-flight secondary-ion mass spectrometry (ToF-SIMS), field desorption mass spectrometry (FD-MS) and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), have occasionally been used to investigate the hardening process or identify Asian lacquers, but are not widespread.
• Analytical pyrolysis coupled to gas chromatography and mass spectrometry (Py-GC-MS) is the most powerful method for the characterisation and identification of lacquer and other organic materials at a molecular level. It will be discussed more in detail below.
The main classes of pyrolysis products obtained from Asian lacquers can be broadly summarised as alkylcatechols (CT), alkylphenols (Ph), alkylbenzenes (B) and aliphatic hydrocarbons (C). These categories of pyrolysis products display specific molecular profiles, which are consistently obtained regardless of the pyrolytic conditions adopted. Their presence and molecular distribution not only enable chemically distinguishing the three main Asian lacquers but also evaluation of the structure and condition of the polymeric network.
A common challenge in Py-GC-MS applications is the complexity of data interpretation, as complex mixtures of organic materials can produce a high number of pyrolysis products. Specifically, lacquer pyrolysis products do not commonly appear as main chromatographic peaks, due to a general low pyrolysis yield of the alkylphenols and catechols compared with other materials, such as fatty acids in lipids. As a result, data processing strategies often use extracted ion chromatograms (EICs) to highlight the presence of specific molecular markers among the numerous pyrolysis products.
Within the framework of the RAdICAL (Recent Advances in Characterizing Asian Lacquer) workshop series, Michael Schilling and co-workers have proposed an elegant system to standardise the interpretation of data obtained by Py-GC-MS of Asian lacquer samples. The workflow combines the Automated Mass spectral Deconvolution and Identification System (AMDIS), freeware software for chromatogram interpretation, and a customised Excel workbook.6 By using a skilfully built spectral library of more than 1500 compounds, the workflow rapidly identifies lacquer pyrolysis products and exports them in the Excel workbook, where each compound is assigned to the material from which it derives. Diagnostic graphs are automatically generated, showing the distribution of the various pyrolysis products present in the analysed sample (Fig. 6).
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Fig. 6 Gestalt graph of pyrolysis markers of a Vietnamese lacquer sample containing laccol. Adapted from V. Pintus, et al., Sci. Rep., 2019, 9, 18837, published under CC-BY-4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).7 |
The approach has inter-laboratory applicability and enables lacquer formulations to be distinguished and studied, so that researchers who are not necessarily pyrolysis experts can identify the materials potentially present in lacquer samples.
Finally, a cross-disciplinary approach is essential to enhance our understanding of these materials and their use in historical contexts, combining insights from scientists, conservators, art historians and manufacturers. Language barriers and terminological ambiguity, particularly the broad use of the word ‘lacquer’, underscore the need for precise scientific analysis to confirm the presence of Asian lacquers and distinguish them from imitations or alternative materials.
Diego Tamburini (British Museum, London, UK) and Lucia Burgio (Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK).
This Technical Brief was prepared for the Analytical Methods Committee by the Heritage Science Working Group and approved by the AMC on 3rd April 2025.
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2025 |