A lacquer book cabinet (shodana)
A lacquer book cabinet (shodana)

Edo period (18th century), signed Haritsi sei, sealed Kan (Ogawa Haritsu; 1663-1747)

Details
A lacquer book cabinet (shodana)
Edo period (18th century), signed Haritsi sei, sealed Kan (Ogawa Haritsu; 1663-1747)
A cabinet comprising four shelves, two pairs of sliding doors decorated with high-relief lacquer appliqués simulating ancient Chinese inks and coins, the finely lacquered motifs including ink in fish form, circular bronze mirrors, a scroll and various coins on a reddish brown ground, fitted with metal mounts
14 x 29 7/8 x 28 in. (35.6 x 75.9 x 71.1 cm.)
Provenance
Yamanaka & Company
Literature
Osaka Bijutsu Club, Nihon kotoji Shina kobijutsu tenrankai (Exhibition of Japanese ceramics and Chinese art) (Osaka: Osaka Bijutsu Club, 1934), no. 221. (fig. 1)
Exhibited
Osaka Bijutsu Club, "Nihon kotoji Shina kobijutsu tenrankai" (Exhibition of Japanese ceramics and Chinese art), 1934.12.4-6

Lot Essay

Ogawa Haritsu, also known as Ritsuo, one of the great individualists in the history of lacquer, was a poet as well as a painter, potter and lacquerer. In the 1680s, he became a disciple of the haiku poet Matsuo Basho (1644-1694). Haritsu turned to lacquer after 1707, the year his friends Hattori Ransetsu and Takarai Kikaku, both disciples of Basho, died. He adopted the art name Ritsuo, or "Old man in a torn bamboo hat," in 1712. The name suggests a poet or artist wandering carefree.

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