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Yaki-naoshi (焼き直し). How a Nineteenth-century Craze for East Asian Arts Propelled Imitation Tokugawa Coinage into Numismatic Collections Worldwide

Author Emily Pearce
Published in Proceedings of the XVI International Numismatic Congress, Vol. IV: Medals, Modern and General Numismatics (2025)
Pages 493-506 (14 pages)
Download https://doi.org/10.1484/M.WSA-EB.5.145515
Number
N#
L143473
 

Abstract

Imitation Chinese knife and spade money and Japanese obans are dotted throughout many numismatic collections. The apex of East Asian imitations held in the Yale University Art Gallery’s Numismatic Department is a framed display of Tokugawa-era coinage. These object types were not made for coin collectors or enthusiasts, but to satiate a growing Western, middle-class interest in arts of the East. The Western fascination with the Far East known as Japonism (Japonisme) created a market demand for affordable, decorative arts pieces evocative of an idealized Asian or oriental aesthetic. Despite purposeful creation for display in middle-class homes, numerous numismatic collectors, auction houses, and museums acquired similar framed objects. This paper investigates the purpose of material culture created in the image of numismatic objects but unintended for numismatic function through the lens of fake Chinese and Japanese coins.

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