The Usage of Toilet Boxes: A Global Habit
- Lacquer Toilet Box
Toilet boxes that have been preserved in museums and galleries are not the only evidence we have of these morning rituals. We can grasp the importance of the 18th century morning toilette if we look at the paintings of that period too. Vanity objects such as toilet boxes were often depicted, thereby highlighting their cultural and material significance for the high-class society of that particular period (figs. 10-11).
Interestingly, toilet boxes and the intimate culture of vanity were not limited to the European context alone. For example, finely crafted cosmetic boxes dating back to 2000 BC have been found in Egypt (fig. 12). It seems that these boxes were linked to personal care and that they were considered a display of social rank for the elites
Toilet boxes were far more than simple containers for hygiene and grooming products. They were essential elements in the “display of intimacy”, tied to a noble expression of femininity and interpersonal bonding of the ruling class, containing stories of duality: something made to show off but kept in one of the most supposedly private environments. Beyond their practical use, lacquered toilet boxes were nuanced with class and gender expression globally, and in the case of Europe, with an intellectual and material appeal for the exotic.