Sold for €195
including Buyer's Premium
Japan, Meiji period (1868-1912)
Ink, watercolors, gouache, and gold paint on paper. Mounted as a hanging scroll on a silk brocade frame with ivory handles. Depicting a standing onna-bugeisha (female samurai) and her travel companion kneeling at her side, holding her bundled baby. The onna-bugeisha holds a large bow with a quiver of arrows on her back.
Inscriptions: Signed ‘Iwasa shi’ 岩佐氏 with a seal. Inscribed to the verso, ‘Iwasa Matabei’.
Image SIZE 70.5 x 36.5 cm, SIZE incl. mounting 155 x 48 cm
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear. Some soiling, creasing, and minor foxing. The frame with usual traces of wear and age.
Important notice: Please note that we will need to remove the ivory roller ends before shipping / handing over the item. The roller ends are not part of this offer.
With a wood tomobako storage box. (2)
Descended from Emperor Kogen, Takenouchi no Sukune served under five legendary emperors, but is perhaps best known for his service as Grand Minister to the Regent Empress Jingu, with whom he supposedly invaded Korea. While Jingu was regent to her son, Ojin, Takenouchi was accused of treason. He underwent the "ordeal of boiling water" as a way to prove his innocence.
Itawa Matabei (1578-1650) was a Japanese artist of the early Tokugawa period, who specialized in genre scenes of historical events and illustrations of classical Japanese and Chinese literature, as well as portraits. He was the son of Araki Murashige, a prominent daimyo of the Sengoku period who had been made to commit suicide, leaving Matabei to be raised with his mother's family name, Iwasa.
Japan, Meiji period (1868-1912)
Ink, watercolors, gouache, and gold paint on paper. Mounted as a hanging scroll on a silk brocade frame with ivory handles. Depicting a standing onna-bugeisha (female samurai) and her travel companion kneeling at her side, holding her bundled baby. The onna-bugeisha holds a large bow with a quiver of arrows on her back.
Inscriptions: Signed ‘Iwasa shi’ 岩佐氏 with a seal. Inscribed to the verso, ‘Iwasa Matabei’.
Image SIZE 70.5 x 36.5 cm, SIZE incl. mounting 155 x 48 cm
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear. Some soiling, creasing, and minor foxing. The frame with usual traces of wear and age.
Important notice: Please note that we will need to remove the ivory roller ends before shipping / handing over the item. The roller ends are not part of this offer.
With a wood tomobako storage box. (2)
Descended from Emperor Kogen, Takenouchi no Sukune served under five legendary emperors, but is perhaps best known for his service as Grand Minister to the Regent Empress Jingu, with whom he supposedly invaded Korea. While Jingu was regent to her son, Ojin, Takenouchi was accused of treason. He underwent the "ordeal of boiling water" as a way to prove his innocence.
Itawa Matabei (1578-1650) was a Japanese artist of the early Tokugawa period, who specialized in genre scenes of historical events and illustrations of classical Japanese and Chinese literature, as well as portraits. He was the son of Araki Murashige, a prominent daimyo of the Sengoku period who had been made to commit suicide, leaving Matabei to be raised with his mother's family name, Iwasa.
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