Page 118 - japanese and korean art Utterberg Collection Christie's March 22 2022
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                KAWABE KADO (1893-1962)
                Doves
                Signed Taisho hinoetora harujitsu Kado ga and sealed Kado
                Two-panel screen; ink, color, gofun and gold on paper
                63¬ x 67æ in. (161.5 x 172.1 cm.)
                $10,000-20,000

                PROVENANCE:
                Hosokawa Rikizo Collection
                Meguro Gajoen Museum of Art, Tokyo
                Born in Kyoto, Kawabe Kado graduated from the Kyoto
                Municipal Special School of Painting. He was a pupil of
                Kikuchi Keigetsu, and an exhibitor at the Bunten, Teiten,
                Shin-Bunten and Nitten. Kado employs a startling pointillist
                technique extensively in this painting to render the sand, upper
                ground, lichens and mounded ground covers. Gofun in raised
                work details the feathers of the doves, portions of the rocks, and
                some of the vegetation. For emphasis mica is mixed into some
                of the pigments, and washes of gold warm the surfaces of rocks.
                The angular treatment of these echoes a cubist sensibility.

                A screen by Akita Senkyo with a very similar scene of doves
                on a garden basin was exhibited at the Teiten in 1928, and is
                illustrated in Nittenshi, Vol. 8, p. 278, no. 5. This suggests that
                Kado may have exhibited this screen earlier, perhaps in 1926 or
                1927.

                European pointillism may have influenced Kado, though the
                technique is perfectly incorporated here into the vocabulary of
                Nihonga painting.
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