Sold for €1,300
including Buyer's Premium
Various artists
Japan, first half 20th century, Taisho (1912-1926) to Showa era (1926-1989)
Ink, watercolors, and gouache on silk. Mounted as a hanging scroll on a silk brocade frame. For this collaboration, twelve artists each freely painted one animal of the twelve animals of the zodiac.
Inscriptions: Each animal is signed and sealed with an artist’s signature, including Rankei 蘭渓; Hakuho 白甫 (Mori Hakuho); Keisui 渓水 (Ito Keisui).
Image SIZE 103.4 x 26.4 cm, SIZE incl. mounting 186 x 39 cm
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear, creasing, and some soiling. The mounting with usual traces of wear and age.
The present painting was likely created during an impromptu painting party (shogakai) where several respected painters collaborated in front of an audience to create this artwork with a limited number of strokes in a relatively short space of time. These types of events became popular during the Meiji area and Kawanabe Kyosai (1831-1889) in particular was known to frequent them, often under the heavy influence of copious amounts of sake. This type of impromptu painting is also referred to as sekiga.
Mori Hakuho (1898-1980) was born in Tokyo and exhibited in government shows and at the Nitten. He won the Japan Art Academy Prize in 1957.
Ito Keisui (1879-1967) was a major figure in the world of Japanese painting from the Meiji to the Showa eras. He studied under Hirai Chokusui and Yamamoto Shunkyo, and was active in the Teiten and Bunten exhibitions.
Various artists
Japan, first half 20th century, Taisho (1912-1926) to Showa era (1926-1989)
Ink, watercolors, and gouache on silk. Mounted as a hanging scroll on a silk brocade frame. For this collaboration, twelve artists each freely painted one animal of the twelve animals of the zodiac.
Inscriptions: Each animal is signed and sealed with an artist’s signature, including Rankei 蘭渓; Hakuho 白甫 (Mori Hakuho); Keisui 渓水 (Ito Keisui).
Image SIZE 103.4 x 26.4 cm, SIZE incl. mounting 186 x 39 cm
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear, creasing, and some soiling. The mounting with usual traces of wear and age.
The present painting was likely created during an impromptu painting party (shogakai) where several respected painters collaborated in front of an audience to create this artwork with a limited number of strokes in a relatively short space of time. These types of events became popular during the Meiji area and Kawanabe Kyosai (1831-1889) in particular was known to frequent them, often under the heavy influence of copious amounts of sake. This type of impromptu painting is also referred to as sekiga.
Mori Hakuho (1898-1980) was born in Tokyo and exhibited in government shows and at the Nitten. He won the Japan Art Academy Prize in 1957.
Ito Keisui (1879-1967) was a major figure in the world of Japanese painting from the Meiji to the Showa eras. He studied under Hirai Chokusui and Yamamoto Shunkyo, and was active in the Teiten and Bunten exhibitions.
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