Page 226 - japanese and korean art Utterberg Collection Christie's March 22 2022
P. 226

A PRIVATE JAPANESE COLLECTION SINCE MID-20TH CENTURY
                82
                A SILVER EWER AND COVER WITH PHOENIX
                SPOUT
                MEIJI PERIOD (LATE 19TH CENTURY), SIGNED ZOROKU HOKO
                AND SEALED (HATA ZOROKU; 1823-1890)
                The compressed globular form ewer, finely cast and chiselled
                with Chinese taotie style masks, dragons and animals in high
                relief set on leiwen (thunder pattern) grounds simulating
                ancient Chinese bronze vessels, the sprout in the shape of a
                phoenix head, jade finial on cover; signature on the bottom
                tier of body
                7¿ in. (18.1 cm.) high
                With original box inscripted Gin yuwakashi and sealed on
                cover, titled Ho hoshu totetsu mon kashiki, signed Zoroku zo and
                sealed
                $15,000-20,000


                Hata Zoroku was a Meiji master in cast metal in the lost-
                wax technique. He learned metalwork techniques in the
                studio of Ryubundo in Kyoto. He was especially renowned
                for his works inspired by archaic Chinese bronzes. A boom
                in Japanese collectors with antiquarian interests spurred
                craftsmen such as Hata Zoroku to focus on the study and
                replication of Chinese antiquities during the Meiji period.

                Hata produced works for the Imperial Household and it is
                known that he made the gold Imperial seal and national seal
                by order of the Imperial Household in 1873. He was under
                consideration as Artist to the Imperial Household (Teishitsu
                Gigeiin). He died several days before the announcement of
                these designations in 1890.
                For bronze works by Zoroku in the collection of the
                Imperial Household, see The Era of Meiji Bijutsu-kai and
                Nihon Kinko Kyokai, in Meiji bijutsu saiken I (Reappraisal
                of Meiji Art I) (Tokyo: Museum of the Imperial Collections,
                Sannomaru Shozokan, 1995), pp. 40-41.
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