A single-case inlaid lacquer inro**
A single-case inlaid lacquer inro**

TAISHO PERIOD, DATED TAISHO MIZUNOE-INU FUYU (WINTER 1922), SIGNED TOKOKU FUZUI AND SEALED BAIRYUKUTSU

Details
A single-case inlaid lacquer inro**
Taisho period, dated Taisho mizunoe-inu fuyu (winter 1922), signed Tokoku Fuzui and sealed Bairyukutsu
Decorated with metal, coral, wood, ivory and stained ivory inlays with a scene of Kusunoki Masashige (also known as Nanko), wearing full armor, holding a bow and kneeling beside a pine tree awaiting the arrival of the emperor, whose banner and palanquin roof appear in the distance, depicted on the reverse, all against a kinji ground, the lower compartments simulated, the interior nashiji; with an ivory netsuke of a chrysanthemum signed Soko and bead ojime
3 7/8in. (9.6cm.) long; the netsuke 1in. (3.8cm.) diam.
Wood box titled on lid Chushin (loyal retainer) and inscribed on the underside Kinji yosegi, Nanko horen o mukaeru zu inro, Taisho mizunoe-inu fuyu Fuzui Suzuki Tokoku saku; netsuke zoge kikubana-bori sou, Taisho jusannen rokugatsu Morita Soko (A gold-ground inro made from assembled pieces of wood with a design of Kusunoki Masashige meeting the imperial palanquin, made in the winter of 1922 by Fuzui Suzuki Tokoku, accompanied by an ivory netsuke carved as a chrysanthemum blossom, made in Taisho 13 [1924] by Morita Soko) and sealed Soko
Literature
Raymond Bushell, The Inro Handbook: Studies of Netsuke, Inro and Lacquer (New York, Tokyo: Weatherhill, 1979), p. 86.
E. A. Wrangham, edited by Joe Earle, The Index of Inro Artists (Alnwick, UK: Harehope Publications, 1995), 294-95.
Architektur und Wohnen (Jan. 1974)

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Lot Essay

Kusunoki Masashige (1294-1336) is a beloved Japanese hero who doggedly supported the losing side and was obliged to commit seppuku. As such, he was the supreme samurai of legend. An obscure chieftain from Kawachi province in the Osaka area, Masashige fought on the side of the ill-fated emperor Godaigo, who went up against the shogunate in Kamakura and attempted a restoration of imperial rule. Some have called Masashige a ruffian and opportunistic swashbuckler, but most have portrayed him as a tragic figure of obstinate determination, credited with loyalist ideals (chushin).

Enshrined by later generations as a patriotic hero, called Nanko, Masashige epitomized loyalty, courage and devotion to the emperor. This inro, featuring the loyalist paragon in full armor awaiting the arrival of Godaigo, was made during a time of rising nationalism. Masashige became a patron saint of World War II kamikaze pilots, who saw themselves as his spiritual heirs in sacrificing their lives for the emperor. The desperate suicide attacks on Okinawa were named kikusui in reference to his crest of a chrysanthemum (kiku) on water.

Previously sold, Christie's London, Japanese Art and Design, 17 November, 1999, lot 121

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