Sold for €2,340
including Buyer's Premium
By Hokutei Bazan, signed Hokutei 北亭
Japan, Nagoya, mid-19th century, Edo period (1615-1868)
In the form of a half bamboo node, the interior finely carved with a crab and hamaguri, the clam incised with concentric ribbing and the lip-like bulges at the ends inlaid with pale horn. The exterior finely worked with subtle ukibori dimples, resembling the natural surface of the bamboo, and naturalistically carved with a growth segment. Himotoshi through the bamboo walls and signed near the edge HOKUTEI.
LENGTH 4.3 cm
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear.
Provenance: Collection of Dr Wou Kiuan. Wou Lien-Pai Museum, coll. no. JL.101. Dr. Wou Kiuan (1910-1997) was a Chinese diplomat and noted scholar of Chinese art. His father, Wou Lien-Pai (1873-1944), was one the leading political figures of early 20th-century China, remembered for his role as speaker and leader of parliament during the turbulent years of the Republican era.
The artist was a talented Nagoya carver, perhaps best known for his clever shunga netsuke of pears, who mostly signed his name Bazan 馬山. Interestingly, the manner of the clam with deeply incised ridges and inlay to the back is reminiscent of Sari.
Literature comparison:
Compare a related wood netsuke of a kappa on a hamaguri clam by the same artist, signed Bazan, illustrated in Sotheby’s Netsuke. Inro. Lacquer, 6 November 1980, New York, no. 70.
By Hokutei Bazan, signed Hokutei 北亭
Japan, Nagoya, mid-19th century, Edo period (1615-1868)
In the form of a half bamboo node, the interior finely carved with a crab and hamaguri, the clam incised with concentric ribbing and the lip-like bulges at the ends inlaid with pale horn. The exterior finely worked with subtle ukibori dimples, resembling the natural surface of the bamboo, and naturalistically carved with a growth segment. Himotoshi through the bamboo walls and signed near the edge HOKUTEI.
LENGTH 4.3 cm
Condition: Very good condition with minor wear.
Provenance: Collection of Dr Wou Kiuan. Wou Lien-Pai Museum, coll. no. JL.101. Dr. Wou Kiuan (1910-1997) was a Chinese diplomat and noted scholar of Chinese art. His father, Wou Lien-Pai (1873-1944), was one the leading political figures of early 20th-century China, remembered for his role as speaker and leader of parliament during the turbulent years of the Republican era.
The artist was a talented Nagoya carver, perhaps best known for his clever shunga netsuke of pears, who mostly signed his name Bazan 馬山. Interestingly, the manner of the clam with deeply incised ridges and inlay to the back is reminiscent of Sari.
Literature comparison:
Compare a related wood netsuke of a kappa on a hamaguri clam by the same artist, signed Bazan, illustrated in Sotheby’s Netsuke. Inro. Lacquer, 6 November 1980, New York, no. 70.
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