The Kura - Japanese Art Treasures
Robert Mangold has been working with Japanese antiques since 1995 with an emphasis on ceramics, Paintings, Armour and Buddhist furniture.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Contemporary item #1426510 (stock #MOR7880)
The Kura
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Nagakura Kenichi's artwork is imbued with a primal energy and balance executed with a keen understanding of composition. Each piece combines classic Japanese bamboo basketry techniques with a contemporary artist's sensibility. He steps outside traditional limitations of form, function and material, challenging our concept of customary bamboo. The transition from container to sculpture is further explored in this piece, with expressive curves and a lack of any definable shape. This earth encrusted style is perhaps the most easily identifiable in his oeuvre; a technique pioneered and unique to him. The amorphic form is 36 x 30 x 26 cm (14 x 12 x 10 inches) and in excellent condition. Light intermingling from various angles through the organic sculpture creates a dramatic, contemplative atmosphere.
Nagakura Kenichi (1952-2018) treated bamboo as a purely sculptural medium. He creates unconventional, organic forms, sometimes accented with pieces of found wood and coated with finishes of his own creation. Nagakura spent years learning traditional bamboo techniques from his grandfather before innovating his own style. Bamboo, says the artist, is an ideal material to express nature: “Bamboo can be either delicate like a spider web or solid as stone, thus embodying the natural cycles of the world.”. Bamboo Sculptures and baskets are held the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco, the Herbert F Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Minneapolis Institute of Art, the Mint Museum of Craft in North Carolina, and in the National Gallery of Victoria, among others.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Contemporary item #1357356 (stock #AOR6425)
The Kura
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Texture has been applied to joined silk panels intimating waves and frothing sea salt which has then been gilded with genuine silver by Imai Toshimitsu signed and dated 2000. Each panel is 67 x 183 cm (31 x 72 inches) and the screen is in excellent condition.
Toshimitsu Imai was born in Kyoto in 1928. After finishing school in 1948, he trained at the Tokyo State Art Academy. Throughout Imai's career his work was distinguished by an acute sensitivity to color. In 1951 Imai was awarded the Kansai-Shinseisaku Prize and in 1952 the prize for the best new artist at the 15th Shinseisaku Exhibition. After his first solo show in Japan, Imai moved to Paris in 1952. There he attended the Académie de la Grande Chaumière and the Sorbonne, where he completed a degree course in medieval history and philosophy. Imai showed paintings in 1953 and 1954 at the Salon de l'Art Sacré. Under the sway of new impressions and influenced by the critic Michel Tapié, Imai switched from representational to abstract art in March 1955. Imai was the first Japanese artist to join Informel, and would be central to the dissemination of its activities abroad. By organizing a group show in Japan in 1956 and visiting his native country accompanied by Sam Francis and George Mathieu (1957), Toshimitsu Imai played a paramount role in introducing European Abstract art to Japan. From 1956 Imai's own work was sold by Leo Castelli in New York and, from 1957, Galerie Stadler in Paris. The success Imai had with his work at the 1953 São Paulo Biennale and the 1960 Venice Biennale brought him international acclaim, followed by recognition at home in 1962: Toshimitsu Imai was awarded a prize at the 5th Exhibition of Japanese Contemporary Art in Tokyo and the Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo holds several of his paintings in their permanent collection. After 1970 - Imai was commuting regularly between Paris and Japan. In 1984 Imai was a co-founder of the Japanese Contemporary Artists' Association (JCAA).
Imai was awarded numerous distinctions in France and elsewhere in Europe: in 1991 he was made an honorary citizen of Madrid, in 1992 of Lyon. In 1996 he was made a chevalier de la Légion d'honneur and in 1997 an Officier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. Imai’s art is governed by fluidity and a rejection of fixed shape and image, where technicality and composition have both been renounced on the canvas.
Similar work sold for 16,173 dollars in Christies Hong Kong, on May 29 2016. Top price paid for this artist was 152,672 USD on 28 May 2016. Another work achieved the price of 47,100 Euro in Paris, 5 June 2013
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 2000 item #1367046 (stock #AFR6534)
The Kura
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A striking abstract work in red on silver over textured washi paper embedded with strands of tatami mat by revolutionary artist Hori Kosai signed ‘91 Hori. It is 13 x 23 cm (5 x 9 inches) mounted floating in a modern frame, pigments on hand-made Washi paper. Here is an opportunity to acquire an important abstract Japanese artist as yet entirely unexplored in the west.
Hori Kosai (b. 1947) is a contemporary artist and Lithographer from Toyama prefecture living in Tokyo. He entered the Tama University of Art in 1967, and in the same year with the assistance of his peers he staged the performance piece "Self-Burial Ceremony", with which his career as an artist was founded. In 1969 his work was accepted into the 9th National Modern Art Exhibition, and his career, unaffiliated with main-line art organizations, took off from there. He was very active in the Japanese student demonstrations of the late 1960s, from within which he became one of the founders, and subsequently leader, of a movement known as Bijutsuka Kyoto Kaigi (Artists Joint-Struggle Council) or "Bikyoto", which sought to interrogate the institutionalized nature of art fomenting activism and exchange between artists. He was expelled from the School before graduation as the leader of the group of radicals. The works of his early career tended to overlap with the activities of that movement, created as pieces questioning the foundations of art itself with the aim of breaking through the boundaries of modernist painting. He was chosen to represent Japan internationally twice, in Paris in 1977 and in Venice in 1984. His importance is expressed in his inclusion in the 1989 book “Print Works by 12 Artists” whch also featured Tabuchi Yasukazu, Kusama Yayoi, Lee U-Fan and Takamatsu Jiro among others. Works by him were featured in a retrospective exhibition on Japanese art from the 70s in Bologna Italy in 1992, and a traveling exhibition featuring his work (Japanese Art Today, USA, Denmark) in 1995. Since then he has been exhibited throughout Europe, Asia and America. An interesting note, he would become a professor at the school whch expelled him in 2002, and has since proven incredibly influential on a new generation of artists. His work is held in the collections of Tokyo Musuem of Modern Art, Ohara Museum, International Art Museum Osaka, Meguro Museum, Museum of Modern Art in Hiroshima, Museum of Modern Art in Kumamoto, as well as the Prefectural Museums of Tochigi, Toyama, Hyogo, Wakayama, Aichi, Kochi and Municipal Museums of Takamatsu, Takaoka, Iwaki, Chiba, Kurobe and Niigata among many others. For more see “Prospects of Contemporary Art: A Celebration of Painting (1989), “Art, Anti-art, Non-art: Experimentations in the Public Sphere in Postwar Japan, 1950-1970” (Merewether/Hiro, 2007) or “Horobi to saisei no niwa : Bijutsuka hori kosai no zenshiko” (Garden of Fall and Re-birth, 2014).
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 2000 item #585853 (stock #MOR1927)
The Kura
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A large Amber glass Mizusashi enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Mizu Utsuwa by Japans top-rated female glass artists, Iwata Itoko. It has a black lacquered wooden lid typical of mizusashi, but a tremendous convoluted form in rich amber which defies simple description. Itoko is one of the top rated glass artists in Japan, and heir to the legacy of Iwata Hisatoshi. The piece is roughly 1 foot (39 cm) in diameter. Work by this artist is in the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art and Corning Glass Museum among others.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 2000 item #609523 (stock #TCR1976)
The Kura
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A radical Iga vase by unconventional artist Kishimoto Kennin (b. 1934) enclosed in the original signed and stamped wooden box. The free form Terracotta image is covered in lichen-like pale green ash glaze. The vase is 10 inches (25 cm) tall, 5 inches (12.5 cm) wide and in perfect condition. Possibly better known today for celadon, Kennin went through a radical period some 15 years ago working on pieces like this unusually formed Iga ware. An artist who has tried many styles, he has been working with clay since the 1950s, devouring styles along the way. Seto, Oribe, Iga and Celadon, all very different approaches which he masters one at a time, extending his unique view of the arts to new realms, and moving on to the next challenge when his appetite and personal genius has been satiated. He was exhibited and prized at the National Japanese Traditional Crafts Exhibition (Nihon Dento Kogei Ten), National Ceramics Exhibition (Nihon Togei Ten), Chunichi International Ceramics Exhibition (Chunichi Kokusai Togei Ten) and Asahi Togei Ten among others, and is held in several important international collections.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 2000 item #1367047 (stock #AFR6535)
The Kura
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“I am here” she whispers as the bespectacled gentleman pours the last drops from his bottle and says “I am going home”…a lithograph by Kei Hiraga numbered 50/120 and signed Key Hiraga ’88 with the artist’s seal in red. The paper sheet, matted and framed, measures 50.5 x 42 cm (20 x 16-1/2 inches) and is in excellent condition. This is an superb example of his work, showing both his eros and playful nature in the abstracted figuration for which he is most remembered. Included is a newspaper featuring an article on his life from December 2000.
Hiraga Kei (Key, 1936-2000) was born in Tokyo and aspired to art from a young age during the tumultuous post-war era when art was not high in the Japanese conscious. He Graduated from the Department of Economics, Rikkyo University in Tokyo, but could not curb the itch, and in 1963 won 3rd Prize at Shell Art Exhibition. The following year he was awarded the New Artist Prize at the 38th National Exhibition and Grand Prix with a grant for study in Paris at the 3rd National Young Artists Exhibition. In 1965 he moved to Paris, where he remained until 1977. The same year (1965) he was exhibited at Seize Jeune Peintres Japonais exhibition at Galerie Lambert in Paris and participated in a group exhibition of nine artists at Galerie Argos, Nantes in Belgium. Over the next decade he would be exhibited in Paris, Prague, Lyon, Edinburgh, Haarlem, Tokyo and Milan as well as participating in group exhibitions in France, Brazil, Italy and Japan. In 1972 Hiraga’s works were shown at Salon des Beaux Arts exhibition and Salon de la Realite Nouvelle at the Museum of Modern Art in Paris and then at the “Japanese Artists from Europe” exhibition at National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto. He would also be included in the “turning point of contemporary art in the 1960’s” at The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, and Kyoto. In 1989 Art Exciting ’89 at The Museum of Modern Art in Saitama Prefecture which travelled to the Queensland Art Gallery in Australia. In 1991 he was featured in “Japanese Anti Art Now and Then” at The National Museum of Art, Osaka. An exhibition of Hiraga’s work Hiratsuka Museum of Art, Hiratsuka in Kanagawa Prefecture and Bokushin Gallery in Tokyo was held the year of his death in 2000. His home in Hakone has been turned into a Museum. Work by him is held in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art New York. A pair of paintings by this artist sold at Christies Hong Kong in 2014 for over 300,000 dollars. For more see “The Elegant Life of Key Hiraga: a Japanese Artist in Europe 1965-1974” (2008)
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 2000 item #1438663 (stock #MOR8069)
The Kura
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A large white bronze Koro by Tsuda Eiju exhibited at the 14th Nitten in 1982. It is published in the catalog for that year, and comes with the Nitten card upon which it is pictured. The creature is 45 cm (18 inches) tall, 30 cm (12 inches) wide and in excellent condition. Tsuda Eiju (1915-2001) studied under Tsuda Shinobu (1875-1946) eventually becoming his heir. He was accepted into and awarded at the Nitten National Exhibition many times including the Hokutosho prize.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 2000 item #613839 (stock #TCR1138)
The Kura
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An intriguing lidded bowl patterned with soft blue red and white in the style of traditional hand made temari balls (multicolored silk thread balls) by modern ceramic artist Sato Kazuhiko (b. 1947). The piece is signed on the base and dated 1992, and comes enclosed in the original signed wooden box. Inside the dish is pebble textured stone gray, with a silver tablet fired into the top. A perfect jigsaw cut separates base and cover. Certainly a representative work by the artist, it measures 6-1/2 inches (16.5 cm) round. Kazuhiko is a widely displayed artist and author of any number of books on the ceramic arts.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 2000 item #57270 (stock #TCR298)
The Kura
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A Stunning combination of works by mother and son Koyama Kiyoko (1936-present) and Koyama Kenichi (1961-1992), both in the original signed wooden boxes. The Tokkuri, by Kiyoko, is of bulbous form decorated with slips of green glaze used sparingly around the neck. The terracotta body is fired to a deep amber on one side, the bright orange clay indicative of Shigaraki showing through on the other. It is 4-1/2 inches (11cm) tall, 3-1/2 inches (9cm) diameter and is signed by the artist on the base. The Iga style Tsubo is spectacular, with the slightly lopped body burnt to a glassy green on parts, showing the typical blue Iga glaze through running rivulets down one side and charred dark gray on the other. It appears to have been pulled from a thousand years on the bottom of the sea. It measures 6-1/2 inches (16.5 cm) tall, 5-1/2 inches (14cm) diameter. Kiyoko Koyama is one of the pillars of Shigaraki and is one of the most influential female artists in her field. Kenichi
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 2000 item #271771 (stock #TCR1085)
The Kura
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A fantastic large tsubo vase by ceramic artist Teramoto Mamoru (1949-present) enclosed in the original signed wooden box. In spite of its size (almost 15 inches (37cm) tall), it is surprisingly light, and the colors are phenomenal. The slightly grooved surface is scored with primitive lines arching upward, filled with slip before firing. The artists signature is on the base of the piece, which is about 15 years old. Mamoru was a student of Matsumoto Saichi of Kutani, and has received numerous prizes throughout his career.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 2000 item #1434459 (stock #MOR8009)
The Kura
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Bonji Buddhist characters in five rings of silver, gold and brass damascene decorate this Incense burner by Izumi Ryoichi enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Kin-do Gorin-mon Koro. We see the number five in Buddhism and Bushido, With the elements Earth, Water, Fire, Wind and Air, as well the famous treatise on fighting by Miyamoto Musashi is called the Book of Five Rings, and the stone stupa seen all over Japan called the Gorinto (Five part tower). This is 3-1/2 inches (9 cm) diameter, roughly the same height and in excellent condition, signed Ryuichi on the base.
Just to make everything really confusing, the metal artist Izumi Ryuichi goes by a plethora of names, depending upon the genre he is creating for, Izumi Ryoichi, Ryusen, Koshiro. He was born in Iwate in 1946, apprenticing under metal craftsman Fujiwara Tomohiko at the age of 20. 10 years later he would study metal carving techniques under Katsura Moriyuki, and then under Living National Treasures Sekiya Shiro and Kashima Ikkoku at the age of 36, absorbing techniques and styles all along the way. Thanks to his dedication to the craft he was chosen to take part in the restoration and reproduction of the National Treasure 8 sided Buddhist stand of Chusonji Temple in 1990, the following year the production of a mirror for Ise Shrine, the most holy site in Japan. Throughout the Heisei era he has been on the restoration team of any number of important works of art in the Imperial Household Collection, various museums in Japan as well as the pair of Nanban Screens in the collection for the Cleveland Art Museum, His work has been awarded at the Nihon Dento Kogei Ten Traditional Crafts Exhibition and Nihon Kinko Ten National Metal Art Exhibition as well as the Dento Kogei Shinsaku Ten New Traditional Crafts Exhibition among others
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 2000 item #1440553 (stock #MOR8080)
The Kura
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Gold willows drape over the highly unusual silver-tinged blue lacquer surface of this water container by Tonami Sosai II enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Uwajima Nuri Seigin Yanagi Te-oke Mizusashi (Silver Blue Uwajima Lacquer, Willow, Bucket Shaped Mizusashi). The outside is a shimmering blue tinged with silver, while inside is black covered in powdered silver flake. A striking combination. The willow is delicately depicted in tendrils of gold about the circumference, on the lid and on the handle with highlights on the trunk of kirigane applied gold. It is 22.5 cm (8-3/4 inches) diameter and in excellent condition.
Tonami Sosai II (1918-2004) was born in Kanazawa city, , although raised in the world of lacquer ware, began his artistic career studying Nihonga (Japanese style painting) under Hatakeyama Kinsei. In 1950 he returned to the family business, studying under his father the first generation Sosai as well as his cousin Oba Shogyo who would later be named a living National Treasure for Maki-e. He exhibited with the National Traditional Crafts Exhibition among others, and received the Nihon Kogeikai Kaicho prize there in 1984.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 1990 item #100062 (stock #MOR577)
The Kura
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Blood red lips curl back from jagged teeth; the genuine Japanese Hannya-men from traditional Noh drama is carved of wood, signed on back and comes enclosed in a brocade bag and kiri-wood box signed Nakajima Senun. The surface is covered in a hard, gofun like substance with gold eyes and gold horns. It measures 8-1/4 inches (21cm) long and was made to be worn, and would appear to be from the later half of the 20th Century. .
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 1990 item #736714 (stock #MOR2329)
The Kura
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Cranes cut on the frosted surface rise from ice blue, their necks curling out as handles as they preen. A quintessentially Japanese subject executed with impeccable Japanese craftsmanship. The vase is 11 inches (28 cm) tall, 6-1/2 inches (16.5 cm) diameter and in perfect condition; enclosed in a covered wooden box.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 1990 item #360622 (stock #TCR1367 )
The Kura
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Here is a fine squat jar form vase, the deep red clay covered in fish-eyed tenmoku glaze by Living National Treasure (Ningen Kokuho) Shimizu Uichi (1926-2004), enclosed in the original signed wooden box. Iron red shows through with startling effect like meteorites in a dark night sky of blue and brown. It measures 6-1/2 inches (16.5 cm) tall, the same diameter. Shimizu is known for the soft persimmon red temmoku (iron oxide) glaze, as well as crackled white and celadon glazes. This is an excellent example piece by the artist. Uichi was born in Kyoto the son of a ceramic dealer. Discarding the family business he apprenticed in plastic arts under Ishiguro Munemaro. He was first exhibited at the Nitten in 1951, receiving numerous awards there since. He also took the gold medal at the Prague International Exhibition, and was at the Brussels World Exposition. He is in the collection of the Tokyo National Museum, Kyoto Museum of Modern art and the Freer Gallery among others.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 1980 item #1110166 (stock #MBR3053)
The Kura
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A superb bronze vase with silver plate design enclosed in the original wooden box and stamped on the base by the artsit. The vessel is 11-1/2 inches (30 cm) tall and in excellent condition
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 1980 item #1418930 (stock #MOR7100)
The Kura
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Sakura blossoms begin to open among the draping branches of a weeping willow soughing in the breeze on this beautiful lacquer box by Inami Kirokusai enclosed in the original signed wooden box titled Wajima Nuri Soshun Maki-e Suzuri Bako (Ink Stone Box of Early Spring Design from Wajima). The design is performed over highly polished black, the interior in nashiji with pine saplings in raised design around the ink stone and water dropper. It is 24.5 x 13 x 3 cm (10 x 5 x 1-1/2 inches) and in excellent condition.
The four generations of the Inami family spanning the Meiji to contemporary were the subject of a major retrospective at the Ishikawa Wajima Lacquer Museum in 2013.
All Items : Archives : Regional Art : Asian : Japanese : Pre 1980 item #1393124 (stock #MOR6808)
The Kura
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An anonymous basket of both red and white soot-stained bamboo (susu-dake) with a root-wood handle, the various textures and colors gleaming with sheer elegance. It is 18 inches (45 cm) tall and in excellent condition, containing a black lacquered bamboo otoshi container lined with copper.