Fine Japanese Art

Fine Japanese Art

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 145. A PAIR OF ANDO VASES SIGNED HAKURYU-EN KINSEI, SHOWA PERIOD, 20TH CENTURY.

PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF JOHN R. YOUNG, DALLAS

A PAIR OF ANDO VASES SIGNED HAKURYU-EN KINSEI, SHOWA PERIOD, 20TH CENTURY

Auction Closed

November 3, 04:10 PM GMT

Estimate

15,000 - 20,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF JOHN R. YOUNG, DALLAS

A PAIR OF ANDO VASES

SIGNED HAKURYU-EN KINSEI

SHOWA PERIOD, 20TH CENTURY


the broad oviform vases with everted necks and silver shakudo mounts, decorated in various thicknesses of wire and coloured cloisonné enamels and moriagedepicting a river in a forest landscape with Mount Fuji appearing from the clouds in the distance, the other with a watermill hidden by pine trees

(2)

31 cm, 12 1/4 in. high

Collection of John R. Young (1921-2013), and thence by descent.

Dallas Museum of Art, Foundation for the Arts Collection.

Each of the bases with the inscription Keiba-ho jisshi jyu-nen kinen keiba Sho [Horse Race commemorating the 10th anniversary of the enforcement of the Horse Racing Act, Prize] Shadan-hojin Teikoku Keiba Kyokai [Imperial Horse Racing Society] Showa shichi-nen ichi-gatsu [January, 1932] 

John R. Young II was a pioneer collector of Japanese art, focusing on the fine details, craftmanship and one of a kind pieces of the Meiji period. In the late 1960’s, John and his wife Frances began to travel abroad and were particularly taken with the Far East. They began to purchase decorative art pieces in China and Japan for their home, and it quickly became a more serious endeavour for them both. John built a reference library of auction catalogues and books and started to study and fine tune his preference for Meiji art at a time when these pieces were not considered fine art. Pursuing the very best that was ever made in this Japanese era brought John true joy and for the next twenty-five years he would follow his passion in collecting.


In the early 90’s, it became recognised that John had built a collection of stellar examples of the finest detail and artistry that was made in the Meiji period. Industry experts and historians organised an around the world exhibition of the pieces and the University of Oxford: Ashmolean Museum published a book, The Dragon King of the Sea by Oliver Impey and Malcolm Fairley. In 1993, John R. Young II and his wife Frances, gifted the majority of their collection to the Dallas Museum of Art so generations to come can see and appreciate the very best metalwork, cloisonné and lacquer works of this era.


John always said that throughout his life, building this collection gave him immense joy as it was a pursuit that resulted in wonderful discoveries, loyal friendships and memorable travels around the world. The pieces presented today are those that were kept by John personally to enjoy living with until he passed away in 2013.