Japanese Woodblock Prints | Including the Sokolov Collection

Japanese Woodblock Prints | Including the Sokolov Collection

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 163. Eleven woodblock prints, Taisho - Showa period, 20th century.

The Sokolov Collection

Eleven woodblock prints, Taisho - Showa period, 20th century

Lot Closed

May 28, 03:39 PM GMT

Estimate

3,000 - 4,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

The Sokolov Collection

Takahashi Hiroaki (Shotei) (1871-1945) Sakamoto Isamu (b. 1931) Tsuchiya Koitsu (1870-1949) Mori Doshun (1909-1985) Yamagishi Kazue (1891-1984) Sasajima Kihei (1906-1993) Yamataka Noboru (b. 1926) Nishijima Katsuyuki (b. 1945)

Eleven woodblock prints

Taisho - Showa period, 20th century


The group comprising:

- Mount Fuji from Mizukubo, signed Hiroaki, sealed, published by

Watanabe Shozaburo in 1936

- Snow on Ayase River (Ayasegawa no yuki), signed Shotei ga, published by Watanabe Shozaburo in 1915

- Distant View of Tsuru Castle (Tsuru-jo enbo), signed Isamu Sakamoto, edition

number 114/150

- Evening Snow (Konsetsu), signed Shotei, published by Watanabe Shozaburo, circa 1920

- Snow at Nezu Shrine, from the series Tokyo Views, signed Koitsu, published by Doi Sadaichi in 1939

- Tea House in Yotsuya, from the series Collection of Scenes in Japan, signed Koitsu, sealed Shin, published by Doi Sadaichi in 1935

- Preparing food

- Mount Fuji from Tsujido (Tsujido no Fuji), from the series One Hundred Views

from Japan (Nihon hyakkei), signed Kazue, sealed Kazue and Ka, 1929

- Mount Fuji, signed K. Sasajima, artist’s seal sasa, 1982, edition number 92/100

- The Shakudo Pass in Kamakura, signed Noburu Yamataka, edition number 15/100

- The Kisokaido, signed K. Nishikima, circa 1980 edition number 13/500

The first: 40 x 26.5 cm.

The second: 27.2 x 35.5 cm.

The third: 38 x 17.2 cm.

The fourth: 41.5 x 26.8 cm.

The fifth: 35 x 53 cm.

The sixth: 41.5 x 26.8 cm.

The seventh: 31.5 x 24.5 cm.

The eighth: 41.5 x 33 cm.

The ninth: 32.5 x 38 cm.

The tenth: 41 x 33.5 cm.

The eleventh: 37.5 x 52.5 cm.

Robert O. Muller (1911-2003) (the fourth)