Lot Essay
The form and size of this box identify it as a kogushibako [small comb-box], an item which was usually displayed on the kurodana, one of the two principal sets of shelves in a classic set of wedding lacquer such as the famous Hatsune no chodo which was completed in 16391. The combination of the kuyo mon used by the Hosokawa family with the kiri mon used by the Imperial family suggests that the box formed part of a set made for a marriage between the two dynasties.
1 Tokugawa Bijutsukan [Tokugawa Art Museum], Hatsune no chodo [Hatsune Maki-e Lacquer Furnishings] (Nagoya, 1985), pl. 2
For other examples of wedding lacquer with the Hosokawa mon, see Kumamoto Kenritsu Bijutsukan [Kumamoto Prefectural Art Museum], Eisei Bunko no shikkogei [Lacquerware in the Eisei Bunko] (Kumamoto, 1983), cat. nos. 42, 44, 60; Osaka Shiritsu Bijutsukan [Osaka Municipal Museum of Art], Kazaru korekushon chodohen [The Casal Collection: Furniture] (Osaka, 1985), cat. nos. 1, 2, 3, 20, 22, 27
For other examples of wedding lacquer with the Hosokawa mon, see Kumamoto Kenritsu Bijutsukan [Kumamoto Prefectural Art Museum], Eisei Bunko no shikkogei [Lacquerware in the Eisei Bunko] (Kumamoto, 1983), cat. nos. 42, 44, 60; Osaka Shiritsu Bijutsukan [Osaka Municipal Museum of Art], Kazaru korekushon chodohen [The Casal Collection: Furniture] (Osaka, 1985), cat. nos. 1, 2, 3, 20, 22, 27