| 中文版 English

具体要求

其它要求

-
关闭
Ɏ KOSEI: A FINE TOKYO SCHOOL IVORY OKIMONO OF A HUNTER HOLDING A HARE
奥地利
2023年12月01日 开拍 / 2023年11月29日 截止委托
此拍品禁止/限制出入境
拍品描述
? KOSEI: A FINE TOKYO SCHOOL IVORY OKIMONO OF A HUNTER HOLDING A HARE

By Kosei, signed Kosei and kakihan
Japan, Tokyo, Meiji period (1868-1912)

Naturalistically carved, the elderly hunter proudly holding a rabbit by the ears which hangs tensely with its legs drawn up. A matchlock rifle (tanegashima) carved with a long barrel and thick stock is visible behind, slung over the hunter’s back and resting in a woven holster. The hunter clothed in thick robes with his powder bag suspended from his belt with a reishi-head netsuke. Signed to the base KOSEI and with the artist’s kakihan utilizing the natural nerve channel plug.

HEIGHT 27.2 cm

Condition: Good condition with minor wear, natural age cracks, the rifle end restored.
Provenance: From a private collection in Belgium, published in the commissioned private catalogue ‘The Nibajama collection’ no. 48.

Tanegashima, most often called hinawaju ('matchlock gun') in Japanese and sometimes in English, was a type of matchlock-configured arquebus firearm introduced to Japan through the Portuguese Empire in 1543. Tanegashima were used by the samurai class and their ashigaru ‘foot soldiers’, and within a few years, the introduction of the tanegashima in battle changed the way war was fought in Japan forever. After Tokugawa Ieyasu destroyed the Toyotomi clan in the siege of Osaka and established the Tokugawa shogunate, the relatively peaceful Edo period arrived, and the use of tanegashima declined. Isolation did not eliminate the production of guns in Japan—on the contrary, there is evidence of around 200 gunsmiths in Japan by the end of the Edo period. However, the social life of firearms had changed: as the historian David L. Howell has argued, for many in Japanese society, the gun had become less a weapon, but rather a farm implement for scaring off animals. With no external enemies for over 200 years, tanegashima were mainly used by samurai for hunting and target practice, the majority were relegated to the arms store houses of the daimyo.

Auction comparison:
Compare a closely related Tokyo school ivory okimono of a hunter holding a monkey in a similar pose, signed Kozan, at Bonhams, Fine Japanese Art, 17 May 2012, London, lot 174 (sold for GBP 7,500).

Trade Certificate: The trade certificate for the sale of this lot within the EU has been granted (permit number 2022/BE04319/CE).





This item contains ivory, rhinoceros horn, tortoise shell, and/or some types of tropical wood and is subject to CITES when exporting outside the EU. It is typically not possible to export such items outside of the EU, including to the UK. Therefore, after this item has the necessary trade certificate, it can only be shipped within the EU or picked up in our gallery in person.

本场其它拍品

  • 竞价阶梯
  • 快递物流
  • 拍卖规则
  • 支付方式
竞价区间 加价幅度
0
10
50
50
600
100
1,600
200
4,000
500
8,000
1,000
16,000
2,000
40,000
5,000
80,000
10,000
160,000
20,000
+

价格信息

拍品估价:1,500 - 3,000 欧元 起拍价格:1,500 欧元  买家佣金: 35.00%

拍卖公司

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