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A LACQUER ‘MINIATURE FUBAKO’ KOGO WITH TOKUGAWA CRESTS
奥地利
06月13日 下午4点 开拍 / 06月11日 下午3点 截止委托
拍品描述
A LACQUER ‘MINIATURE FUBAKO’ KOGO WITH TOKUGAWA CRESTSJapan, 19th century, Edo period (1615-1868)Of small rectangular form, superbly decorated in gold takamaki-e and hiramaki-e on a densely textured e-nashiji ground. The kabusebuta (overhanging) lid, with its distinctive cut-away sides, features a variant of the Maru ni Mitsu Kashiwa mon (Three Oak Leaves within a Circle), a crest most prominently associated with the Tokugawa clan. Alongside it appears the Gosan no Kiri (Paulownia Crest). The interior is finished in nashiji with gold fundame rims.SIZE 7 x 4 cm x 7 cmCondition: Very good condition with only minor wear to the edges and interior and typical age-related traces of use.Provenance: From the private collection of Maybelle Dore. Maybelle (Betty) Dore started collecting Japanese antiques in the postwar years, during the 1950s and 1960s, when interest in Japanese art was generally very low. For her business she ventured to Japan on her own to assemble netsuke and related works of art, including pipe cases and kogo (incense containers). Betty was also a founding member and the first Chairwoman of the International Netsuke Society, Northern California Chapter.Maru ni Mitsu Kashiwa (Three Oak Leaves within a Circle) is a traditional Japanese family crest (kamon) featuring three stylized oak leaves arranged in a radial pattern, enclosed within a circle. The oak leaf, or kashiwa, symbolizes endurance, strength, and continuity, as oak trees retain their leaves through winter. This mon is most famously associated with the Matsudaira and Kashiwabara clans and is closely linked to the powerful Tokugawa family, who ruled Japan during the Edo period.Gosan no Kiri (Paulownia Crest) is another prominent kamon, depicting three clusters of paulownia flowers and leaves, typically in a 5–3–5 arrangement. Originally used by the Imperial Family, it was later bestowed upon Toyotomi Hideyoshi and came to represent authority and imperial favor. In the Meiji period, it was adopted as the official emblem of the Japanese government, and it remains the symbol of the Prime Minister’s Office today.Museum comparison:Compare a related inlaid lacquer letter box with family crests, dated to the 19th century, in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, object number 10.7.20.

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价格信息

拍品估价:500 - 1,000 欧元 起拍价格:500 欧元  买家佣金: 35.00%

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Galerie Zacke
地址: Sterngasse 13, 1010 Vienna, Austria
电话: 0043-1-5320452
邮编: 1070
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