A NARA OR HAMANO SHAKUDO, GOLD AND COPPER TSUBA

Details
A NARA OR HAMANO SHAKUDO, GOLD AND COPPER TSUBA
FIRST HALF 19TH CENTURY

Oval, and with a sensuki surface carved deeply into the ji, the guard is carved on the ura with a tree on a hillside and applied on the omote in shakudo, copper, silver and gold with a standing figure of a Sarawakan blowing a trumpet while a spotted hound sits by his feet, a waterfall rushing past copper and shakudo rockwork on the left, unsigned, height 7 cm.

Lot Essay

The aboriginies of Sarawak, together with some other denizens of the island of Borneo, were sometimes used by the Dutch as manservants and created a cultural stir when they first appeared in Nagasaki. The mere exoticism of these peoples was enough to ensure their ongoing use as subject matter in various works of art.