Page 103 - japanese and korean art Utterberg Collection Christie's March 22 2022
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31
 SAKAI HOITSU (1761-1829)
 Benzaiten
 Sealed Hoitsu shi
 Hanging scroll; ink, color, gold and silver on silk
 32Ω x 14¬ in. (82.6 x 37.1 cm.)
 With wood box authentication by Tanaka Hoji (1812-1885)
 and Sakai Doitsu (1845-1913)
 $15,000-25,000


 Hoitsu was a versatile artist and is best known for his revival
 of the art of Ogata Korin (1658–1716), but he painted a
 number of full-color Buddhist images. At the age of thirty-
 six, he took Buddhist vows at the temple Tsukiji Hongan-ji
 in Edo (modern Tokyo), becoming a lay priest. Hoitsu was
 a devotee of the goddess Benzaiten and apparently based
 this painting on an image in the Tsurugaoka Hachimangu
 Srhrine in Kamakura. For his very similar painting of
 Willow-Branch Kannon in ink, color and gold leaf on silk, also
 in shades of green and blue, in The Metropolitan Museum
 of Art, New York (2019.419.2), see Richard Fishbein,
 “Collecting Kannon,” Impressions 35 (2014), pp. 176–79
 (www.japaneseartsoc.org).








































 Sakai Hoitsu (1761–1828). Willow-Branch Kannon. Japan. Edo
 period, Circa 1810. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New
 York, Fishbein-Bender Collection, Gift of T. Richard Fishbein
 and Estelle P. Bender, accession number 2019.419.2
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