Exquisite Lacquered-Bamboo Incense Container ー金城 一国斎 "蜂花象嵌竹香筒"
Exquisite Lacquered-Bamboo Incense Container ー金城 一国斎 "蜂花象嵌竹香筒"
Item Code: K1094
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An incense stick container of natural bamboo decorated with a hornet hovering over red magnolia flowers in thick colored lacquer by Kinjo Ikkokusai wrapped in a dark silk pouch threaded with gold designs and enclosed in a period wooden box. It is signed Ikkokusai and measures 29.5 cm (just less than 12 inches) long and is in excellent condition.
Ikkokusai I (1777-1852) was born in Ise, Mie prefecture, and was trained in the lacquer arts in Osaka. His talent was recognized and in 1811 he was taken as an official artist of the Tokugawa Clan, relatives of the Shogun and Feudal lords of Owari near present day Nagoya. All three of his sons would take the name Ikkokusai, His first son, (true name Nakamura Yoshiyuki), would settle in Osaka, and works he made were presented at the first National Industrial Art Exhibition (Naikoku Sangyo Hakurankai) in the early Meiji period. The third son (Sawagi Tsunesuke, 1822-1875) would remain and work in Nagoya until his death. The second son (Nakamura Issaku) would leave the Owari province to further his studies, traveling throughout Japan and developing the Takamorie technique of built-up layers of lacquer creating nearly 3-dimensional works. He would become the carrier of the name, and after a sojourn in Hagi (Choshu), moved to Hiroshima in 1843 where he would pass on his techniques and experience to Kinoshita Kentaro (1829-1915). It was Kentaro who would officially become the third head of the family and who brought the name to the fore with his dedication to Takamorie lacquering. Kinjo Ikkokusai IV (1876-1961) continued to develop the method with new materials and designs. The family is currently under the 7th generation (b. 1965) who was named an important cultural property of Hiroshima Prefecture in 2011.
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