Page 172 - Fine Japanese Art March 27, 2020 Galerie Zacke Netsuke and Okimono
P. 172

187 |  HOSHUNSAI MASAYUKI: A MASTERFUL
 STAG ANTLER NETSUKE OF A DRAGON-HEADED
 MOKUGYO
 By Hoshunsai Masayuki, signed Masayuki
 Japan, Asakusa, Tokyo, second half of 19th century


 A Buddhist mokugyo (wooden fish-gong) with two confronting
 dragon heads sharing a tama (magical pearl) between their mouths.
 The dragon heads are dramatically three-dimensional, and one of
 them is covered in heavily spongiform material, yet still as finely
 carved as its opposite – a true masterpiece in every sense of the
 word! Thus, they appear like confronting opposites, embodying
 the yin and yang principle of ancient Chinese philosophy – a great
 source of inspiration to the Asakusa carvers. The long horns of
 the dragons extend downwards to either side of the instrument,
 forming fine curls along the way, and encircling an elaborate pierce-
 carved formal design on each side, raised above an openworked
 wave ground. Central himotoshi above the signature in a raised
 square reserve in seal form MASAYUKI 正之. The other himotoshi
 ‘natural’ through the opening of the gong on the underside.

 HEIGHT 4.3 cm
 Condition: Very good condition with one age crack near the
 signature.
 Provenance: Ancient collection Charles Cartier-Bresson (1853-1921)
 collection no. 262. Charles Cartier-Bresson was a textile industrialist
 and art collector specializing particularly in works from Japan. He
 is the great uncle of famous photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson.
 Additional collection no. 490.
 Literature comparison: Compare to similar netsuke in Sydney L.
 Moss Ltd. (2016) Kokusai the Genius: and Stag-antler Carving in
 Japan, Part 3, pp. 98-191,
 nos. 391-393.
 Auction comparison:
 Compare to a similar netsuke
 sold at Van Ham, Netsuke &
 Japanische Kunst, 8 December
 2016, Cologne, lot 1675.
 Estimate EUR 5.000,-
 Starting price EUR 2.500,-
























 Portrait of Charles Cartier-Bresson by Jean-Matthias Schiff
 in the Museum of Fine Arts Nancy



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