Page 147 - japanese and korean art Utterberg Collection Christie's March 22 2022
P. 147

50
 AN EARTHENWARE SCULPTURE OF A WOMAN
 (SHAKOKI DOGU)
 LATE JOMON PERIOD (5TH-3RD CENTURY BCE)
 Of low-fired reddish clay with black fire marks, the body of a
 goggle-eyed figure, decorated with incised details and scrolling
 cord pattern, wearing head-ornament with inscised designs
 7¿ in. (18.1 cm.) high
 The results of the report on Thermoluminescene Analysis no.
 N122a32 obtained by the Research Laboratory for Archaeology
 and the History of Art, Oxford University, are consistent with
 the dating of this lot
 $80,000-120,000

 PROVENANCE:
 Private collection, Japan
 LITERATURE:
 Kitano hokori / Kamegaoka bunka (Pride of North Region
 / Kamegaoka Culture) (Aomori: Aomoriken Bunkazai
 Hogokyokai, 1990), p. 129
 Jomon no fukei / Daichi to jujyutsu (Scenery of Jomon / Land and
 spell) (Iwate Prefectural Museum, 1984), pl. D-3


 This figure displays the typical decoration of a shakoki dogu
 (goggle-eyed figure), one of the two mainstream types of clay
 figurine made at Kamegaoka in Aomori prefecture during the
 Final Jomon period. Modelled using incised cord marks and
 distinctive features of the small and narrow eyes suggest the
 date of this figure to be latter half of the ‘goggled-eye’ period.
 A similar shakoki dogu with small and narrow eyes is in the
 collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
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