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Eizan Kikugawa, Beauty, Japanese Woodblock Print Artist: Eizan Kikugawa (1787-1867) Title: Beauty and a Doll Publisher: Sanoya Kihei Date: Edo period Dimensions: (T) 36.7 x 24.9 (B) 36.8 x 25 cm Condition: Backed, some ink spots on the top panel. Ref: JG051706B-1

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Eizan Kikugawa, Beauty, Japanese Woodblock Print Artist: Eizan Kikugawa (1787-1867) Title: Beauty and a Doll Publisher: Sanoya Kihei Date: Edo period Dimensions: (T) 36.7 x 24.9 (B) 36.8 x 25 cm Condition: Backed, some ink spots on the top panel. Ref: JG051706B-1

Estimate 200 - 300 GBP
Starting price 200 GBP

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KIKUKAWA EIZAN: TEN PRINTS OF CHILDREN IMITATING A DAIMYO PROCESSION KIKUKAWA EIZAN: TEN PRINTS OF CHILDREN IMITATING A DAIMYO PROCESSION By Kikukawa Eizan (1787–1867), signed Eizan hitsu Japan, 19 th century, Edo period (1615-1868) Color woodblock prints on paper. Signed Eizan hitsu, censor's seal: kiwame, Dog 3 aratame; publisher Yamadaya Shojiro. Titled Children Imitating a Daimyo Procession. Illustrating children imitating a daimyo procession, emulating not only garb and uniform, but also the distinct mannerisms of everyone in the encompassing ritual. The boys are caught mid-dance, as they go to the front of the procession to clear the path ahead. The bottom half of the print is dominated by the lively movements of the boys, which is in sharp contrast to the calm and peaceful nature of the composition’s upper half. SIZE of the sheet ca. 17 x 8.8 cm (each) Condition: Wear and fading commensurate with age, browning, foxing, few tears, minor material loss including worm holes, and losses around the edges from previous mounting, overall, still presenting well. Each sheet mounted on a paper passepartout. Provenance: From an English private collection. Many of the children with more subservient roles wear robes with a diamond-shaped crest on them; known as a kuginuki-mon, the symbol connotes the yakko, or the servants of higher-ranking samurai or daimyo under the bakufu ruling system. Museum comparison: A closely related polyptych is in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, accession numbers 06.1184, 06.1185, 06.1186, and 06.1194.

A GROUP OF FIVE WOODBLOCK PRINTS OF BIJIN A GROUP OF FIVE WOODBLOCK PRINTS OF BIJIN Japan, late Edo period (1615-1868) to Meiji period (1868-1912) Color woodblock prints on paper. 1. By Ogata Gekko (1859 - 1920). Kuchi-e. Titled Watching Rain. Illustrating a Bijin standing in the balcony of a pavilion. SIZE of the sheet 29.3 x 21 cm 2. By Utagawa Toyoshige (Toyokuni II) (1777-1835). Vertical oban. Signed Toyokuni ga. Titled Courtesan Toyooka from the Okamoto House. SIZE of the sheet 36.5 x 25 cm 3. Signed Toyokuni ga. Vertical oban. Depicting a bijin and child; the little boy plays with his toys under the watchful gaze of his mother. SIZE of the sheet 33.2 x 22.9 cm 4. By Kikugawa Eizan (1787 – 1867). Vertical oban. Signed Eizan hitsu. Depicting a beauty dressed in voluminous robes, standing with her hands folded across her chest, accompanied by her attendants. SIZE of the sheet 35.9 x 21.8 cm 5. By Kikugawa Eizan (1787 – 1867). Vertical oban. Signed Eizan hitsu. Depicting a Shamisen player dressed in a blue robe, nibbling on the tip of her bachi plectrum. SIZE of the sheet 37.2 x 25.1 cm Condition: Wear, browning of paper, minor creasing, few tears, some losses, some staining, and few wormholes, otherwise presenting well. Some backed with Japan paper. 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. Museum comparison: Compare a closely related print of the Courtesan Toyooka, in the Austrian Museum of Applied Arts.