Lot Essay
Kenya, along with his contemporary Teiji, were two of a group of artists who took part in the so-called Ritsuo revival in the 19th century, using glazed pottery as well as or in addition to traditional techniques.1
For a box by Teiji similarly decorated in ceramic inlays see Christies London, 16th May 2007, lot 46.
1. E. A. Wrangham, The Index of Inro Artists (Harehope, 1995), pp. 286-7 and pp.125-126; Honolulu Academy of Arts, Shadows and Reflections: Japanese Lacquer Art from the Collection of Edmund J. Lewis (Hong Kong, 1996), cat. no. 26
For a box by Teiji similarly decorated in ceramic inlays see Christies London, 16th May 2007, lot 46.
1. E. A. Wrangham, The Index of Inro Artists (Harehope, 1995), pp. 286-7 and pp.125-126; Honolulu Academy of Arts, Shadows and Reflections: Japanese Lacquer Art from the Collection of Edmund J. Lewis (Hong Kong, 1996), cat. no. 26