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HACHIFUSA SHURI: A SURIMONO OF SPECTACLES RESTING ON A BOOK HACHIFUSA SHURI: A SURIMONO OF SPECTACLES RESTING ON A BOOK By Hachifusa Shuri (18th–19th century), signed with seal Hachifusa Japan, Edo period (1615-1868) Color woodblock print on paper. Signed with seal Hachifusa. The surimono depicting a pair of spectacles and their case resting on a long book. Inscribed to the back in pencil, ‘Sari’. SIZE of the sheet 18.6 x 14.2 cm Condition: Presenting well, with wear, soiling, ink stains, creasing, folds, and fading. Provenance: Family collection of either Felix Tikotin (1893-1986) or his son-in-law Louis (Loek) Borensztajn (1935-2021), Netherlands. Felix Tikotin (1893-1986) was an architect, art collector, dealer, and founder of the first Museum of Japanese Art in the Middle East. He became one of the world’s leading collectors of Japanese art, starting at the age of 18, and continued to collect and work as an art dealer in Berlin in the 1920s. In the 1930s Felix Tikotin fled from the Nazis and hid his collection in the Netherlands. After the war, he decided that his collection should be taken to Israel, where in 1959 and with the help of Abba Hushi, who was the mayor of Haifa, The Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art was established. The Museum's collection comprises more than 8,000 items of art and crafts. 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.

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HACHIFUSA SHURI: A SURIMONO OF SPECTACLES RESTING ON A BOOK HACHIFUSA SHURI: A SURIMONO OF SPECTACLES RESTING ON A BOOK By Hachifusa Shuri (18th–19th century), signed with seal Hachifusa Japan, Edo period (1615-1868) Color woodblock print on paper. Signed with seal Hachifusa. The surimono depicting a pair of spectacles and their case resting on a long book. Inscribed to the back in pencil, ‘Sari’. SIZE of the sheet 18.6 x 14.2 cm Condition: Presenting well, with wear, soiling, ink stains, creasing, folds, and fading. Provenance: Family collection of either Felix Tikotin (1893-1986) or his son-in-law Louis (Loek) Borensztajn (1935-2021), Netherlands. Felix Tikotin (1893-1986) was an architect, art collector, dealer, and founder of the first Museum of Japanese Art in the Middle East. He became one of the world’s leading collectors of Japanese art, starting at the age of 18, and continued to collect and work as an art dealer in Berlin in the 1920s. In the 1930s Felix Tikotin fled from the Nazis and hid his collection in the Netherlands. After the war, he decided that his collection should be taken to Israel, where in 1959 and with the help of Abba Hushi, who was the mayor of Haifa, The Tikotin Museum of Japanese Art was established. The Museum's collection comprises more than 8,000 items of art and crafts. 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.

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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