Page 98 - Fine Japanese Art November 29, 2019 Galerie Zacke
P. 98

84  |   RITSUO: A RARE TWO-CASE
 LACQUER ‘RITSUO REVIVAL’ INRO
 WITH BUDDHIST DESIGN

 In honor of Ogawa Haritsu (1663-1747), signed Ritsuo and
 sealed Kan
 Japan, dated 1772 or 1832, Edo period (1615-1868)
 Published: Jahss, Inro and other miniature art forms of Japanese
 lacquer Arts, pl. 204.
 Eskenazi Ltd, Japanese inro from private collections, no. 27.
 Sydney L. Moss, Ltd, They are all fire and every one doth shine,
 London: Sydney L. Moss, 2010, no. 5.
 Exhibited: Pacific Asia Museum, Japanese lacquer from Southern
 California collections, illustrated on page 27.

 A two-case lacquer inro with a with a formalized lobed square   Condition: Superb condition with extremely minor surface wear.
 reserve framed by a silver lacquer ground with a gold lacquer   Provenance: Sotheby’s London, 12 April 1965, lot 131. Dr and Mrs
 border. The inside of the reserve showing a fine red-brown ground   Melvin Jahss, New York. Victor Topper, Toronto. Thence Collection
 imitating faded roiro below spectacular inlays showing Chinese   Drs. Edmund und Julie Lewis, New York.
 Buddhist-derived designs of an archaistic incense burner inlaid
 in ceramic with a lacquer imitation metalwork open cover, with a   In the publication ‘They are all fire and every one doth shine’ by
 red-lacquered nyoi scepter resting behind it. The reverse shows six   Sydney L. Moss there is a detailed description of why this seemingly
 large silver takamaki-e archaic Chinese characters dating it to the   genuine and superior example by Ritsuo is categorized as a ‘Ritsuo
 Kyoho period and with a cyclical date of 1712, 1772 or 1832, etc.   revival’ piece (making it no less important). The synopsis is that the
 The last two characters show the signature RITSUO and pinkish   artist of this inro, no doubt a very talented craftsman, has purposely
 ceramic seal KAN. The inside with fine, dense nashiji.   left a clue in the cyclical date of 1712 as it cannot correspond to the
 Kyoho period (1716-1735). It is likely that the artist made this inro in
 With a fine guri-lacquer ojime and a lacquer netsuke showing a   1772 or 1832, after Ogawa Haritsu had died and in fact dated the
 hossu (Buddhist fly whisk). The lacquer netsuke bears an illegible   inro correctly, but left the discrepancy in the Kyoho period date as
 seal.  a clue to show that this in fact a revival piece for the important and
 influential master Ogawa Haritsu.
 HEIGHT 6.5 cm, LENGTH netsuke 6 cm
 Estimate EUR 3.000,-
 Starting price EUR 1.500,-






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