Trip to Japan at Bonhams Tradition Travel and Transition Japanese Art Sale in London

Kawase Hasui, Pagoda at Honmonji Temple. Estimate: £1,000-1,500.
Martin Cid Magazine
Martin Cid Magazine

London – The fascination for Japan as a travel destination speaks to many. Before the world is ready again for tourism, Bonhams has gathered a collection of Japanese prints capturing the most scenic, albeit unfrequented and secluded, sides of Japan in the 20th century. This collection of Shin Hanga (New Print) by Kawase Hasui (1883-1957) spans more than 30 lots, and will be presented in Bonhams London sale of Tradition Travel and Transition: Japanese Art across the Centuries on 4 November 2021.

Kawase Hasui, a towering figure in Japan’s Shin Hanga tradition, is well known for his love of travel, a pastime which meant much more than mere tourism for him. As Hasui himself once wrote: ‘… travelling is my favourite hobby… and this hobby is not just something that I casually speak of, since sketching is my goal…’

Evening in Beppu. Estimate: £1,200-1,800.
Evening in Beppu. Estimate: £1,200-1,800.

He was particular about where he would open his sketchbook, depicting famous spots but rarely choosing the most obvious or famous angles. Lot 350 (Evening in Beppu), for example, depicts the onsen (hot spring) resort of Beppu, as popular in 1929 as it is today, but seen through a tangle of bare, wintry branches.

Hasui treated his country’s great temples and shrines in the same independent spirit, avoiding the standard frontal view and focusing on a small section—often one without any distinguishing features—so that, as with lot 353 (Pagoda at Honmonji Temple; imaged at the front), only the written title reveals the building’s identity.

Kinosaki. Estimate: £3,000-4,000.
Kinosaki. Estimate: £3,000-4,000.

In terms of pure landscape, Hasui avoided picturesque views that had become famous, preferring to savour the quieter nuances of places, not mirroring them with banal precision but capturing their changing, elusive moods, as with lot 336 (Kinosaki) where he immerses the viewer in the melancholy atmosphere of a dark stormy night and the chill of a sudden downpour.

Dusk at Aso. Estimate: £1,200-1,800.
Dusk at Aso. Estimate: £1,200-1,800.

He travelled to feel, not just to see, and in so doing conjured an emotional response and encouraged a desire to travel freely—to experience the loneliness of a deserted mountain path (lot 344, Dusk at Asoor a coastline characterised by the strange roots of pine trees whose dappled reflections are enhanced by a clear moon (lot 352, Teranohama).

Teranohama. Estimate: £1,200-1,800.
Teranohama. Estimate: £1,200-1,800.

Hasui was a huge talent and enjoyed commercial success in Japan and overseas, designing more than 600 woodblock prints in only four decades, some published in editions of no more than 2,000, far fewer than some of the great landscape prints of the nineteenth century such as Hokusai’s ‘Great Wave’.

The majority of his prints in this sale come from private collections. Some bear one of the earliest copyright seals of his long-term publisher, Watanabe Shozaburo, while a few are designs even earlier and rarer, dating from before the great earthquake that devastated Tokyo and Yokohama in 1923. Most major museum collections of Hasui’s prints are in the United States, where his work first gained an international following in the 1920s—it is rumoured that the late Steve Jobs was also an avid collector.

Shin Hanga are 20th century Japanese prints made by the same traditional system used to create ukiyo-e, but are distinctly different in their look (western style); and tactile quality (because of the modern paper and pigments). Common themes of Shin Hanga includes landscapes, nature and actors.

Japanese cloisonné enamel

The sale also explores the themes of Tradition and Transition via Japanese cloisonné enamel. The art of Japanese cloisonné enamelling, elevated from simple beginnings to global pre-eminence during the second half of the 19th century, is represented by masterpieces from the ateliers of two contrasting artists: Namikawa Yasuyuki of Kyoto (?? ??; 1845-1927) and his unrelated namesake Namikawa Sosuke of Tokyo (?? ??; 1847-1910).

Right: A cloisonné-enamel squat jar and cover. Namikawa Yasuyuki. Estimate: £15,000-20,000.  Left: A fine cloisonné-enamel and musen ('wireless') rounded rectangular tray. Estimate: £18,000-25,000.
Right: A cloisonné-enamel squat jar and cover. Namikawa Yasuyuki. Estimate: £15,000-20,000. Left: A fine cloisonné-enamel and musen (‘wireless’) rounded rectangular tray. Estimate: £18,000-25,000.

Lot 188, a squat jar by Namikawa Yasuyuki, is a miracle of detailed miniaturization, depicting a famous temple building on a tiny, curved shape that presented formidable technical problems, yet the intricate modelling of the leaves, the walls of the building, the branches and the trees was enhanced still further by the use of tiny flecks of silver wire. This lot carries an estimate of £15,000-20,000.

Lot 187, a fine cloisonné-enamel and musen (‘wireless’) rounded rectangular tray, is a classic piece by Namikawa Sosuke, demonstrating his technical brilliance in building up the surface of a piece in many layers of colored glass paste; the smooth, shiny surface was then created through a laborious process of grinding and polishing. Sosuke is especially admired for his skill in bokashi (shading), a gentle transition in colour, evidently achieved without the use cloisons (dividing wires). Experts have yet to work out exactly how he did this, and no one has ever managed to match the subtlety of his work. This lot carries an estimate of £18,000-25,000.

The very early years of the twentieth century saw another kind of transition, from crowded, highly elaborate decoration to a sparser, less Victorian style more suited to the times. This change is clearly seen in the work of Yabu Meizan (1853-1934), leading exponent of the ‘Satsuma’ style of earthenware that conquered global markets between 1880 and 1910. Highlights Yabu Meizan span from his early to late career, including:

Right: A fine satsuma tall beaker vase, Meiji era. Estimate: £12,000-18,000.  Middle: A satsuma baluster vase, Meiji era. Estimate: £4,00-6,000.  Left: A miniature satsuma vase, Meiji era. Estimate: £800-1,200.
Right: A fine satsuma tall beaker vase, Meiji era. Estimate: £12,000-18,000. Middle: A satsuma baluster vase, Meiji era. Estimate: £4,00-6,000. Left: A miniature satsuma vase, Meiji era. Estimate: £800-1,200.
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