Page 54 - Fine Japanese Art March 27, 2020 Galerie Zacke Netsuke and Okimono
P. 54

48 |   OKAKOTO: A SUPERB
                            IVORY NETSUKE OF A TIGER
                     By Yamaguchi Okakoto, signed Okakoto
                     Japan, Kyoto, 18th century, Edo period (1615-1868)


                     A masterful, compact and powerful representation of a seated
                     and snarling male tiger with his chubby, finely carved paws pushed
                     firmly against the ground and his thick tail curling up around his
                     side. The fur coat is inked and has been worn through generations
                     of handling, especially to the back, which is smooth to the touch
                     and shows a fine yellowish patina. The defining attribute of this
                     netsuke, however, is the facial expression, which is amusingly
                     ambiguous - as if the tiger forgot how to roar. The pupils are
                     inlaid in reddish horn. Signed underneath in a rectangular reserve
                     OKAKOTO 岡言.
                     HEIGHT 3.4 cm
                     Condition: Good condition with expected age cracks and wear to
                     fur coat.
                     Provenance: English private estate.

                     Yamaguchi Okakoto, pupil of Yamaguchi Okatomo, was a brilliant
                     carver and excelled at carvings of animals. His work is considerably
                     more rare than those of other members of the Oka- school.
                     Auction comparison: For a reclining tiger by Okakoto see Bonhams,
                     The Harriet Szechenyi Sale of Japanese Art, 8 November 2011,
                     London, lot 128.
                     Estimate EUR 8.000,-
                     Starting price EUR 4.000,-



 50                                                                                                         51
   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59