Tradition Travel Transition 2021-11-04 Auction - 374 Price Results - Bonhams in England
LiveAuctioneers Logo

A black-lacquer two-case inroAn impressive imperial presentation cloisonnéA fine cloisonné-enamel and musen ('wireless')
Done
London, England, United Kingdom
Auction Details

Tradition Travel Transition

The fascination for Japan as a travel destination speaks to many. Before the world is ready again for tourism, Bonhams has gathered a collection of Japanese prints capturing the most scenic, albeit unfrequented and secluded, sides of Japan in the 20th century. This collection of Shin Hanga (New Print) by Kawase Hasui (1883-1957) spans more than 30 lots, and will be presented in Bonhams London sale of Tradition Travel and Transition: Japanese Art across the Centuries on 4 November 2021. Kawase Hasui, a towering figure in Japan's Shin Hanga tradition, is well known for his love of travel, a pastime which meant much more than mere tourism for him. As Hasui himself once wrote: '... travelling is my favourite hobby... and this hobby is not just something that I casually speak of, since sketching is my goal...' He was particular about where he would open his sketchbook, depicting famous spots but rarely choosing the most obvious or famous angles. Lot 350 (Evening in Beppu), for example, depicts the onsen (hot spring) resort of Beppu, as popular in 1929 as it is today, but seen through a tangle of bare, wintry branches. The majority of his prints in this sale come from private collections. Some bear one of the earliest copyright seals of his long-term publisher, Watanabe Shozaburo, while a few are designs even earlier and rarer, dating from before the great earthquake that devastated Tokyo and Yokohama in 1923. Most major museum collections of Hasui's prints are in the United States, where his work first gained an international following in the 1920s—it is rumoured that the late Steve Jobs was also an avid collector.
Lot Number: Lowest
24
Sold
A wood netsuke of a tiger: A wood netsuke of a tigerBy Masanao, Yamada, Ise Province, Edo period (1615-1868), 19th centuryThe tiger seated, turning to its left, snarling with an open mouth, its long tail passing forward around
0001: A wood netsuke of a tigerEst. £2,500-£3,500
See Sold Price
An ivory netsuke of a tigress and cub: An ivory netsuke of a tigress and cubSchool of Tomotada, Kyoto, late 18th centuryThe mother seated, her head turned to the right, her tail passing over her right flank, one forepaw resting
0002: An ivory netsuke of a tigress and cubEst. £4,000-£5,000Lot Passed
Sold
An ivory netsuke of a recumbent deer: An ivory netsuke of a recumbent deerBy Garaku, Osaka, Edo period (1615-1868), early 19th centurySeated, its legs drawn into a compact composition, turning to its left to lick its left haunch, the
0003: An ivory netsuke of a recumbent deerEst. £1,000-£1,500
See Sold Price
Sold
A fine wood netsuke of a recumbent kirin: A fine wood netsuke of a recumbent kirinBy Ikkan (1817-1893), Nagoya, 19th centuryLying with its head slightly raised and turned to the left, its tail drawn forward and its legs folded underneath to
0006: A fine wood netsuke of a recumbent kirinEst. £15,000-£20,000
See Sold Price
Sold
A roiro (black-lacquer) two-case inro: A roiro (black-lacquer) two-case inroBy Tatsuke Takamitsu (Kokyo, active 1818-1830), Edo period (1615-1868), early/mid 19th centuryThe black-lacquer ground decorated in polychrome and gold takamaki-e
0008: A roiro (black-lacquer) two-case inroEst. £1,500-£2,000
See Sold Price
A lacquer single-case inro: A lacquer single-case inroBy Ryusei, Edo period (1615-1868), 19th centuryThe rich gyobu ground decorated in polychrome takamaki-e, depicting a snake, its mouth wide open in a hiss, its long body
0009: A lacquer single-case inroEst. £12,000-£15,000Lot Passed
Sold
A boxwood three-case inro, ojime and netsuke in the: A boxwood three-case inro, ojime and netsuke in the form of terrapinsBy Gekko, Edo period (1615-1868), mid 19th centuryEach naturalistically carved, the inro with the terrapin's head and legs
0010: A boxwood three-case inro, ojime and netsuke in theEst. £1,200-£1,800
See Sold Price
A roiro (black-lacquer) five-case inro: A roiro (black-lacquer) five-case inroEdo period (1615-1868), circa 1800The rich black-lacquer ground decorated with togidashi maki-e, depicting a red spiny lobster perched on rocks at the shoreline,
0012: A roiro (black-lacquer) five-case inroEst. £4,500-£5,500Lot Passed
Sold
A large black-lacquer wood single-case inro: A large black-lacquer wood single-case inroStyle of Shibata Zeshin, Meiji era (1868-1912), late 19th centuryIn the form of a partly used ink-cake, carved in relief on one side with a tiger standing
0014: A large black-lacquer wood single-case inroEst. £5,000-£6,000
See Sold Price
Sold
A black-lacquer two-case inro: A black-lacquer two-case inroBy Shibata Zeshin (1807-1891), Meiji era (1868-1912), late 19th centuryOf rectangular Chinese ink-cake form decorated with intentionally crackled ground and carved chips
0016: A black-lacquer two-case inroEst. £30,000-£35,000
See Sold Price
Sold
A shell-inlaid yatate (portable brush and ink: A shell-inlaid yatate (portable brush and ink container)Somada style, Meiji era (1868-1912), late 19th/early 20th centuryEntirely inlaid with iridescent small flakes of shell to create tightly
0018: A shell-inlaid yatate (portable brush and inkEst. £1,500-£2,000
See Sold Price
Sold
An ivory kiseruzutsu (pipe case): An ivory kiseruzutsu (pipe case)By Joho, Edo period (1615-1868) or Meiji era (1868-1912), 19th centuryOf muso-zutsu form, carved in relief with Tobosaku Sennin standing, holding a peach, a deer
0019: An ivory kiseruzutsu (pipe case)Est. £700-£800
See Sold Price
An ivory kiseruzutsu (pipe case): An ivory kiseruzutsu (pipe case)By Kyomin, Tokyo, Meiji era (1868-1912), late 19th centuryOf muso-zutsu form, carved in relief with a sennin emerging from a dilapidated hut beneath a withered tree
0021: An ivory kiseruzutsu (pipe case)Est. £700-£800Lot Passed
An ivory kiseruzutsu (pipe case): An ivory kiseruzutsu (pipe case)By Tesseki, Taisho era (1912-1926), dated 1913Of muso-zutsu form, finely engraved in kebori with a continuous scene of Chinese scholars in a mountainous landscape,
0022: An ivory kiseruzutsu (pipe case)Est. £700-£800Lot Passed
Sold
Nine tsuba (sword guards): Nine tsuba (sword guards)Edo period (1615-1868), 18th to 19th centuryThe first of shakudo, lobed mokkogata outline, chiselled with chrysanthemums embellished with gold; the second of iron, circular,
0023: Nine tsuba (sword guards)Est. £1,500-£2,000
See Sold Price
Six Echizen tsuba (sword guards): Six Echizen tsuba (sword guards)Edo period (1615-1868), 17th to 19th centuryAll of iron, circular or roughly circular, and made in Echizen Province, the first pierced and chiselled with vine leaves
0024: Six Echizen tsuba (sword guards)Est. £800-£1,000Lot Passed
View:
24
TOP