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A SIGNED SURIMONO DEPICTING TWO LACQUER BOXES FOR CLOTHES A SIGNED SURIMONO DEPICTING TWO LACQUER BOXES FOR CLOTHES Japan, 19th century Color woodblock print on paper. Horizontal chuban. Signed and with double gourd seal. The surimono depicting a pair of lacquer boxes enclosing traditional robes detailed with brocade designs, placed on the floor of a pavilion. SIZE of the sheet 18.6 x 25 cm Condition: Good condition with minor wear. Good colors, fine impression, some browning, soiling, folds, and a centerfold. Gently mounted on a passepartout. Provenance: From the private collection of Thomas Padua, Mühldorf, Germany. Thomas Padua was an artist and collector of Japanese woodblock prints who exhibited his surimono collection at the Olaf Gulbransson Museum, in ‘Glückwünsche aus Kyoto: Japanische Shijo-Surimono aus der Sammlung Thomas Padua,’ 3 November 2013 to 26 January 2014. Surimono, literally "printed matter", are high-quality, limited-edition, privately commissioned, woodblock-printed "greeting cards," mainly produced between the 1790s and the 1830s, and usually ordered for New Year's greetings. Surimono usually paired poetic texts with images, and both were typically intended to carry the cachet of "insider knowledge" for a cultured and well-educated audience. Museum comparison: Compare a related surimono depicting a lacquer box for clothes by Ryuryukyo Shinsai in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession number JP2158.

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A SIGNED SURIMONO DEPICTING TWO LACQUER BOXES FOR CLOTHES A SIGNED SURIMONO DEPICTING TWO LACQUER BOXES FOR CLOTHES Japan, 19th century Color woodblock print on paper. Horizontal chuban. Signed and with double gourd seal. The surimono depicting a pair of lacquer boxes enclosing traditional robes detailed with brocade designs, placed on the floor of a pavilion. SIZE of the sheet 18.6 x 25 cm Condition: Good condition with minor wear. Good colors, fine impression, some browning, soiling, folds, and a centerfold. Gently mounted on a passepartout. Provenance: From the private collection of Thomas Padua, Mühldorf, Germany. Thomas Padua was an artist and collector of Japanese woodblock prints who exhibited his surimono collection at the Olaf Gulbransson Museum, in ‘Glückwünsche aus Kyoto: Japanische Shijo-Surimono aus der Sammlung Thomas Padua,’ 3 November 2013 to 26 January 2014. Surimono, literally "printed matter", are high-quality, limited-edition, privately commissioned, woodblock-printed "greeting cards," mainly produced between the 1790s and the 1830s, and usually ordered for New Year's greetings. Surimono usually paired poetic texts with images, and both were typically intended to carry the cachet of "insider knowledge" for a cultured and well-educated audience. Museum comparison: Compare a related surimono depicting a lacquer box for clothes by Ryuryukyo Shinsai in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession number JP2158.

Estimate 150 - 300 EUR
Starting price 150 EUR

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For sale on Wednesday 04 Sep : 11:00 (CEST)
vienna, Austria
Galerie Zacke
+4315320452
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