Page 210 - Fine Japanese Art Auction November 2 2019 Galerie Zacke
P. 210

253 |  A MAGNIFICENT AND RARE STAG ANTLER
                           NETSUKE OF A KAPPA NINGYO ATTRIBUTED
                           TO OZAKI KOKUSAI

                     Unsigned, attributed to Osaki Kokusai (1835-1892)
                     Japan, Tokyo, Asakusa, mid to late 19th century

                     Brilliantly carved in openwork depicting a mermaid (ningyo)
                     with a long fish-like tail, supple breasts and the head of a kappa,
                     surrounded by dense and crashing stylized waves. The fantastic
                     mythical creature holds on to the wave-frame and to a spray of
                     another wave, the hands crisply carved and the movement of
                     the composition achieved masterfully, as if the imaginary beast
                     was floating through a sea of waves. One can only image what it
                     would be like to be serenaded by this mysterious being. The head
                     is slightly turned to the right, the mouth is slightly opened, and
                     the eyes are large and wide-open – a truly enigmatic expression.
                     The difficult material is masterfully utilized, in typical Kokusai
                     fashion, carved from a branch point near the coronet, and showing
                     a wonderful gnarly structure on the sides. Unsigned, however
                     confidently attributed to Ozaki Kokusai. Natural himotoshi.
                     HEIGHT 3.1 cm, LENGTH 4 cm
                     Condition: Excellent condition.
                     Provenance: French private collection.
                     Ozaki Kokusai (1835-1892), whose real name was Ozaki Soso, was
                     the founder of the famous Asakusa school in Tokyo, which was
                     the center for stag antler carving in Japan during the latter half of
                     the 19th century, and produced, in their own right, some of the
                     greatest masterpieces of netsuke art from difficult materials. He
                     was a modernist, though he still had ties to tradition. Like Shibata
                     Zeshin, he lived through the dramatic change between the Edo
                     and Meiji periods and utilized his genius to combine traditionalist
                     ideas with ambitious modern ideas, leading the way into modern
                     Japan, also exhibited in this netsuke with the birth of this fantastic
                     creature.
                     Literature comparison: Compare the manner of the expression to
                     a similar netsuke by Ozaki Kokusai in Kokusai the Genius: and Stag-
                     antler Carving in Japan’, Sydney L. Moss, Ltd., 2016, no. 119.
                     Estimate EUR 8.000,-
                     Starting price EUR 4.000,-




























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