eastasia

JAPAN AND EAST ASIA

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Catalogue 41A, Japan and East Asia:
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Catalogue 40A, Japan and East Asia:
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Miscellaneous Reference Works on East Asian Fine and Applied Arts:
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East Asian Photography:
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20th Century East Asian Books:
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Classic Ehon, Illustrated Books and Maps:
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East Asian Design:
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Previous Catalogues:
Catalogue 39A

Catalogue 38A

Catalogue 37A

Catalogue 36A

Articles: Scott Johnson's Sketchtour article (ANDON 37)

Featured books:

81147


TAKEI TAKEO
We have an extensive collection of 20th century livres d'artiste by Japanese author/artist Takei Takeo. It includes 138 books, printed with many different processes, as well as nearly all of the original book boxes (honbako) Takei designed for the collection.
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85521

A HANDSOME AND BRIGHT SET IN ORIGINAL GILT CLOTH
ALCOCK, Sir Rutherford. THE CAPITAL OF THE TYCOON: A NARRATIVE OF A THREE YEARS' RESIDENCE IN JAPAN, 2 VOLUMES. London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts & Green, 1863. First edition. xxxi + [1] + 469 pp. + [40] pp. publisher's catalogue/ x + 539 pp. 8vo., green cloth stamped in gilt and blind, samurai and lady vignettes to front boards, light shelfwear to spines at heel and crown. Bright and tight. Text partially unopened. Occasional light foxing to margins of plates, not affecting images, and facing text margins. Armorial bookplates to front pastedowns, small closed tear to front flyleaf of volume II. Two folding color maps, numerous color and tinted plates, and b/w engravings in the text. Map of Japan has small closed tear along one fold. Alcock was Special Envoy to Japan during 1859-1861, a turbulent time; his keen observations encompass every aspect of Japanese life, culture, politics and pastimes. Exceptionally nice condition. (Cordier, Japonica 556; Wenckstern I, 43). $1,250.00 #85521 order or inquire


85036[DESIGN] Furuya KÔRIN. SEIKA. Kyoto, Unsôdô, Meiji 36 [1903]. Tall folio folding album, 36.8 x 24.9 cm, double- page table of contents and final colophon page. The latter indicates this is a "saihan", a reprint done a month after the first printing. There are 12 large double page designs in color woodcut by Furuya Kôrin, one of the most important of Unsôdô's early neo-Rimpa designers. Superbly printed by Unsôdô in intense colors, metallic inks, etc. This book should be ranked right along Sekka's best as a masterpiece of the genre. One or two internal spots, the covers are expertly repaired, an early impression showing original wood grain on the blocks. All in a navy cloth clasped chitsu case. $3,750.00 #85036 order or inquire



84906[DESIGN] Kamisaka SEKKA. UTA-E. Kyoto & Tokyo: Unsôdô, Shôwa 9 [1934]. 1 volume, 31 x 22 cm, cloth, ribbon bound covers, paper label. 25 color full page images after designs by Sekka. As Sekka's last work, it crowns his remarkable career with a lovely evocation of Kôetsu's Saga-bon. (For more on this important work, see Hillier's description on p.976 of the second volume of his ART OF THE JAPANESE BOOK.) The condition is a bit better than average, with relatively little of the offsetting from the prints to the poems that is usual in this book. Slight foxing and slight edgewear. The printing is very good, the colors lovely. It is a very good copy overall. Housed in the original titled chitsu case which shows general soiling all over, no clasps and with some folds starting. One volume (complete). $3,250.00 #84906 order or inquire





85071[DESIGN] Ishii HAKUTEI, editor. GENDAI MEIKA ZUAN-SHU. Tokyo, Oranda-shoten, Taishô 5 [1916]. 31.5 X 21.7 cm. Portfolio of design patterns printed in woodcut, offset, etc. Wonderful collection of work on 25 sheets. Designs by such important artists as Tsuda SeifĂ», Ishii Hakutei, Wada Eisaku, Yamamoto Kanae, Kosugi Misei and others. A four page preliminary essay and table of contents is laid in and there is a final colophon slip glued to the inside back cover of the portfolio. The tied printed portfolio covers have lost their cloth spine, else a very good and complete copy of this scarce and important work. $1,500.00 #85071 order or inquire








71916[SKETCHTOUR GENRE] Fukuda Shûtaro [Bisen], artist. SHINA SANJÛ- GAKAN. Tokyo, Kanao Bun'endô, Taishô 9 [1920]. 2 volumes, oblong folio, 23.2 x 31.2 cm.

A few years after Bun'endô had published the justly famous SHINA TAIKAN by the same artist, the publisher, Kanao Takejiro, assembled the same group of artisans (incuding the master printer, Nishimura Kumakichi) to craft another "take" on the scenery of China - a series of 30 "scrolls" in color woodcut embedded in a narrative shot through with a multitude of illustrations in other media. Scott Johnson in his seminal article on the sketchtour genre in ANDON 37, has called SHINA TAIKAN "the most ambitious of all the sketch-tour books." The SHINA SANJÛ-GAKAN is certainly no less of an impressive achievment (and a much scarcer book).

Enormously expensive to produce (It was priced at 50 Yen, impressive even by the inflationary standards of the time!) few were sold and this set is hardly ever found. Our copy has the original wraparound chitsu case with clasps intact. The chitsu itself is a work of art, depicting junks on a river. With a bit of internal foxing and a hint of hinge weakening, but overall a very nice set, complete, of an important and scarce work in the sketchtour genre: $2,250.00 #71916 click image for more detail, pictures

82612[EHON] Tani BUNCHÔ, artist. SHAZANRO GAHON. Tôto [Edo]; Izumiya Tôjiro, Bunsei 9 [1826]. Original dark green/blue covers, printed paper title label. 27.2 X 18.8 cm. 5 pages of prefatory material are followed by 40 pages of sumi-e and color prints, mostly double page, sealed prints, then a one page afterword by Bunchô and a one page colophon/ad page by Izumiya. With the exception of one small spot of ink on one page and a few expertly repaired tears in the pages, about as nice a copy of this book as one could ever hope to find. We have compared it to a copy with the original 1816 colophon and found ours equivalent, if not actually a bit better, illustrating yet again the profound complexity of Japanese bibliography. This copy is printed on very thin paper, much thinner than the norm. The printing is very early and impeccable, the colors appropriate, the overall condition very good or better. In Bunchô's inimitable style reminiscent of his work for the MEIKA GAFU. $4,250.00 #82612

33224[EHON MANUSCRIPT] SHIJÔ SCHOOL ALBUM. Fukuro-toji style string-bound album, 26.5 x 19.3 cm, consisting of 14 double page and 12 single page color images painted in a skillful Shijô manner, apparently a product of the mid-19th century. The majority of the images are of figures, with a significant minority of bird and flower studies. This work is very problematical: the cover once had a paper label, it is gone, but in its place, someone has brushed in faintly "Kakinuma Kohei Kaichô" [The Pictorial Notebook of Kakinuma Kohei]. We have been unable to unearth any reference to a Kakinuma Kohei. In addition there are various kanbun-style poetical utterances on the backcover. However, it would seem that the covers have been added later, as the first and last paintings are both worn and soiled, as if they had been the outside covers themselves for a long time. Thus the inscriptions and the cover title are probably not contemporary with the work itself and may be of doubtful accuracy.

In any case, the work is obviously done in the style of a printed "gafu", right down to the square-ruled sumi borders. Whether it was meant to be a "gakô" or painted preliminary from which an actual book was to be designed or whether it was a sketchbook done in the spirit of a printed work, the images are well designed and executed: the composition and brushwork are quite competent. More importantly, there is resident in almost every painting all the high energy and high spirits of mid-19th century Shijô at its best.

As regards the temptation to call this work a skillful copy from an existent published gafu, none of the images seem to have appeared elsewhere. We cannot point to any work from which they could have been copied and neither can any other expert we have consulted. As for the question of "Kakinuma Kohei"'s identity or whether he was even the painter, there may never be a satisfactory answer. The album is lovely and, ultimately, may well prove enigmatic. $2,400.00 #33224 order or enquire

82693

[MAP - JAPAN]. [SETTSU NO KUNI MEISHO]. Kyoto, Kimura Juyôdô, Kan'en Gannen [1748]. A handcolored woodblock printed map of Settsu provice, containing the area of Osaka castle, etc. 117.3 X 129.1 cm, folds into heavy paper covers of approximately 27.7 x 18.9 cm. The original title slip is gone, replaced by a handbrushed label: "Osaka no Kuni" "Carte?? Baie d'Osacca." Lovely and interesting map, found at Beans main volume, p.22, 1748.1. Condition is very good, printed on very strong and supple paper. Image at left is a detail. (For a complete illustration, see the record at University of British Columbia's website for the Beans copy.) Our copy has different hand-coloring. The Beans copy hand-colors the harbor, ours hand-colors the land, primarily. $2,250.00 #82693



82697

[MAP - JAPAN] Gyokuransai SADAHIDE & Kikuchi Shu^zo. MUSASHI NO KUNI ZENZU. Edo, Kikuya Ko^saburo & 12 others. Ansei 3 [1856] 112 X 127 cm. An interesting colored woodcut map of the Musashi plain. Folds into its original titled covers, 28 x 18.6 cm. Nice colors, impression and colors. Sadahide was not only a talented printmaker but was also responsible for several important maps of the time. [Beans 1856.13] in Supplement B, page 41. See the University of British Columbia's website for more info on this map; image at left is a detail. $1,850.00 #82697






57903[EHON] Kawamura Kihô, artist. KIHO GAFU. Kyoto: Yoshida Shimbei, Bunsei 7, [1824]. 1 vol. (complete). 17.2 x 25.2 cm. 5 page prelims, 30 double page color woodblock prints, 1p final, colophon. The covers are greyish-blue with a blindstamped pattern of flowering gourds. The title label is supplied. The covers are a bit soiled and stained and the contents are lightly thumbed. Good to very good impressions and colors. Kihô was the adopted son of BumpĂ´ and his work rivals Bumpô's in freshness and simplicity.

This copy is a bit anomalous: It differs from Mitchell's examples "A" and "B". Obviously, the Bunsei 7 data on the colophon is earlier than the Mitchell examples and matches the date of the preface. At the same time, the two seals on the preface are missing. And, of course, the covers are different. Compared to an "A" example in our stock, the color choices are different, though on average equally light. However, the paper is thinner and softer, leading to a more "crumbly" effect in printing. The few tiny border breaks are pretty much identical in the two examples and apparently the number of blocks used is the same. (Ref: Mitchell pp.360,1; Brown p.105; Ryerson p.388; Kerlen #839) Obviously, a very interesting example of this lovely book.

This particular copy is also distinguished by the fact that it was presented by W.H. deRoos to Sekaguchi Tamotsu and has his inscription, dated July 27, 1959, on the inner part of the clasped chitsu case. $1,500.00 #57903 order or enquire

36160
[EHON] Keisai Masayoshi, artist. SANSUI RYAKUGA SHIKI. Edo: Suwaraya Ichibei. Kansei 12 [1800]. 26.5 x 18.0 cm. 30 sheets. Printed floral pattern on the covers [probably not original, as the printed title on the inner front cover is not present in this copy]. 29 single page and 15 double page color illustrations. Ref. Brown p.124; Mitchell p.460,1; 93,4; Ryerson p.213; Hillier pp. 477,8, 480. This copy has a few stains and spots internally, and is a bit thumbed, but the printing is quite good. This book of landscapes is one of the loveliest of Keisai's works. $1,285.00 #36160 order or enquire

85065[DESIGN BOOK] FURUYA Kôrin, artist. KÔRIN MOYÔ. No colophon: [Kyoto: Yamada Unsôdô, c. 1907] 25 x 35.5 cm, oblong folding album printed in color woodcut, in cloth over board covers with paper label. Covers titled in the usual hentai-gana. Preface by Furuya. The album consists of 21 oblong spreads lavishly printed in colors and metallic inks. This would seem to be a variant issue of the 2 volume KÔRIN MOYÔ, published by Unsôdô in 1907, where the 25 double page spreads in 2 volumes were folded in half and issued as small orihon albums. Fairly well printed and overprinted in metallic inks and bold colors. A good example of the Neo-Rimpa style, here available in a full page, unfolded version. A very unusual format for this important work. [Ryerson p.363] $1,400.00 #85065 order or enquire

83262[DESIGN BOOK] Kamisaka SEKKA [Yoshitaka]. SHIKISHI. Kyoto: Tanaka jihei, Meiji 34 [1901]. 2 folios, each 31.2 x 21.5 cm. Volume one has 2 color prints and 30 b+w sumi prints, volume two has 30 b+w sumi prints. An interesting design book of subtlety. The covers are quite worn, but overall a good printing in good condition. String-bound fukuro-toji Japanese style with the title printed on the covers. Complete. $1,450.00 #83262 order or enquire

82093

[EHON] Nishimura NANTEI. NANTEI GAFU. Kyoto, Kyowa 4, [1804]. 3 vols. in one, gappon, in tan covers with a blindstamped vegetal gourd pattern. 25.8 x 18.2 cm. The printed paper label is present but chipped, the covers are soiled. Good printing with slight worming. Overall a good copy of this classic Shijo work. See Mitchell 432 for a description of this book. Our version is printed without the kyoka poems. Complete. $1,450.00 #82093



36171[EHON] Kawamura Kihô, artist. KIHÔ GAFU. Kyoto: Yoshida Shimbei, Bunsei 10, [1827]. 1 vol. (complete). 17.5 x 25.9 cm. 5 page prelims, 30 double page color woodblock prints, 1p final, 8pp ads, colophon. The covers are greyish-blue with a swirling wave pattern in mica. The title label is worn. The covers are a bit soiled and stained and the contents are very lightly thumbed with a bit of worming. Good to very good impressions and colors. Kihô was the adopted son of Bumpô and his work rivals Bumpô's in freshness and simplicity. This copy appears to resemble Mitchell's example "A" and is doubtless an early impression. (Ref: Mitchell pp.360,1; Brown p.105; Ryerson p.388) $1,375.00 #36171 order or enquire

81137

ONCHI Kôshiro, artist & MAEDA Sekibô, poet. Kashû SHINSHÔ FUJI [Collection of Poetry: NEW PRAISE, FUJI]. Tokyo: Fugaku Honsha, Shôwa 21 [1946]. 28.7 x 20 cm., 2 full page color woodcuts by Onchi, 1 tipped-in page of calligraphy. Blue and white flexible covers, in a dustwrapper depicting Fuji which is also a print by Onchi. Very good. The prints by Onchi are very lovely. [See Sotheby's Schlosser Sale Item #302 for another copy; Hillier Vol. 2, p 1022] $1,350.00 #81137







80612

ONCHI Kôshiro. Shikashû Anthology of Contemporary Japan NIHON NO HANA FLOWERS OF JAPAN. Tokyo: Hongakusha, Shôwa 21 [1946]. Another Hongakusha work, this one is edited by Onchi Kôshiro, and many of the lovely woodcut textual illustrations are by him as well. Other artists include the important Creative Print movement figures Kawakami Sumio, Kawanishi Hide and Maekawa Sempan. The poets include Satô Haruo, Kitahara Hyakushu and Onchi, himself. A tour- de-force and important work, here with slight browning and foxing, else very good in the original woodcut printed wrapper (by Onchi). $1,250.00 #80612



81170[BASEBALL - JAPAN] Shihon Gakkou-hen. SHÔGAKU TOKUHON Maki no Ichi. Aichi-ken [Nagoya] Shihongakkô [Teacher's College] n.d. [1870's] An interesting little elementary school reader from the first series of textbooks designed and created by the Teachers College Normal School system in Japan after the Meiji restoration to introduce "Western Learning" to the country.

What follows is a series of excerpts from an informative article found online:

"The Normal School, which was under the direct jurisdiction of the Department of Education, was also requested to compile elementary school textbooks on the basis of its practical experience. Also an office for editing elementary school textbooks was set up in the Normal School in December, 1872.

The Department of Education encouraged independent prefectures to reprint the textbooks and other educational material which it and the Normal School had compiled, and it was not long before most of the prefectures adopted this practice and the reprinted textbooks were in nationwide use. Especially following the establishment of regulations for the course of study for elementary schools by the Normal School the textbooks prepared by this institute gained wide acceptance. These textbooks included elementary school readers, introductory geography, outlines of Japanese topography, outlines of world topography, outlines of Japanese history, outlines of world history, elementary school arithmetic, etc. The elementary school textbooks proved to be an interesting introduction of the new knowledge based on the Civilization and Enlightenment (Bunmeikaika) thought, and they were accepted not only as textbooks but also as popular reading material for the public at large. Thus their influence was of considerable importance in the dissemination of the new culture."

It is pretty clear that the introduction of Western culture also entailed the introduction of a least a variety of baseball in the 1870's, as well (a fact confirmed by other sources on the origins of baseball in Japan). The American educational consultants and their Japanese colleagues in Aichi saw fit to include a cut and a story with a group of boys playing with bats and balls, pitching and hitting - interesting proof that baseball is nearly as old in Japan as it is in the States. The text of the story, crudely translated, is:

"Look at at you, playing with that ball you brought and look at me, hitting it with the bat I have. That ball is a hard one, but there are soft ones, too, so that even if someone gets hit with it, they won't get hurt. Children love to play ball and find it so good that they play til the end of the day. They'll play in the heat all day long. Sometimes, despite the greatest heat, they will foolishly play on and damage their health."

Hard to tell whether the text is praising baseball or damning it, but it is pretty clear that kids loved it. By the way, the Japanese terms for ball and hit are the exact noun and verb used today as baseball terms.

As described above, these early textbooks were printed for the immediate local audience - here the new school system of Aichi Ken - present day Nagoya and environs. The prints were probably printed locally, as well. Very unusual. The condition is only fair to good - the printing is good, the images interesting naive art. Complete copy of this volume one of the new reader series and a fascinating piece of baseball incunabulum. $1,250.00 #81170


36213
[EHON] Kumasaka TEKIZAN, artist. SANSUI KARA-E SHINAN Suharaya Môhei, et al., Ansei 4-5 [1857-8]. 2 volumes [Shohen, Ni-hen] Small format string-bound fukuro-toji binding in paper covers with a printed paper title label, 17.6 x 12 cm. Nanga-style color illustrations throughout. Mitchell refers to one volume in the BM. [Mitchell pp. 185, 460] Pleasant and gentle one page landscape studies. The condition is about very good, as are the colors and printing. Nanga works are by no means common and this is a particularly lovely example of the genre. 2 volumes. $975.00 #36213 order or enquire


83285

[EHON] Katsushika HOKUSAI. JORURI ZUE 2 vols. n.p., n.d. [c. mid-Meiji, 1890?] 25 x 16.8 orihon folding albums in stiff paper covers with printed paper title lables. Extremely lovely delicate color printing of this recut version of the JORURI ZEKKU of 1815. Retains the images and the text from the original, in slightly different format. Good example of Meiji printing at a high level. Condition very good, as are the colors and impressions. $685.00 #83285







37861[EHON] Matsumura GOSHUN, artist. NIHON MEIGA KAGAMI. Tokugawa Jidai. Tokyo: Tôyôdô Branch Shop, Kanda, Meiji 31 [1898]. Stamped in red on the title slip "Goshun-Ôeyama". Large, 25 cm x 18 cm orihon folding album. In embossed stiff creme paper covers. There are 12 double page color printed images. A pleasing Meiji rendition of Goshun's inimitable style. Particularly interesting as the images are freighted with bits and pieces of the whole 19th century development in the Shijô school: Suiseki, Chinnen, etc. By no means a common work, identical to the copy at Mitchell 434, (see also Ryerson 378). The covers are soiled and a bit stained, internally vg. The impressions and colors are very good. Complete. $685.00 #37861 order or enquire

80621

KAWAJI Ryûkô, poet. ONCHI Kôshiro, artist. MUI NO SEKKEI, Shishû. Tokyo, Fugaku Honsha, Shôwa 22 [1947]. Large 8vo., the book was designed by Onchi and illustrated by him as well. There is a wonderful abstract "essential portrait of the poet" in color woodcut by Onchi. Kawaji was the mentor in poetry for Yukio Mishima when the latter was in his early teens. The book represents quite an interesting intersection of author, artist & designer. The covers are a bit soiled, else very good condition overall. #43 of 600cc, signed by Ryûkô. [Onchi, HON NO BIJITSU, p 116] $675.00 #80621






38283
[SÔSAKU HANGA] KATÔ Tetsunosuke, artist. HOKKAIDÔ FÛKEI TEZURI HANGA SHÛ. Published by the Sapporo Kankô Kyôkai. [Sapporo Tourism Association). A folder, bound in grass cloth containing 5 handprinted color woodcuts (image size: approx. 10 x 14.5 cm) of landscapes around Sapporo, done in an elegiac and realistic style of sôsaku hanga. This folder was probably published in the 1930's, when Katô was most active. (He is best known in this country for the lovely landscape watercolors he did, signed "T. Kato") Though little is known of him, Merritt, in her most recent survey, does mention his participation in sôsaku hanga groups at the time. This work is in very good condition, and the prints themselves are quite skillful. Appears to be complete, as the only other copy I've found reference to also had five prints: $650.00 #38283 order or enquire


83273(EHON) NAKAMURA Fusetsu & KAWAHIGASHI Hekigotô. HAIGA HO. Tokyo: Kôkadô, 1909. 23 x 15.4 cm. String-bound Japanese style in flexible covers with stamped title. This visual and textual examination of the relationship between "haiga", haiku drawings, and the the haiku themselves was a collaborative effort between Fusetsu, a Western- style oil painter who was also perhaps the most eminent practitioner of haiga in his day, and Hekigotô, a noted haiku poet. They were both intimates of Masaoka Shiki (1867-1902) and leaders of the influential literary circle associated with HOTOTOGISU magazine. Counting the decorative title page, there are 13 full page color woodcuts after designs by Fusetsu, 40 calligraphed haiku by Hekigotô reproduced in woodcut and a 38 page scholarly discussion by Fusetsu, as well as a few collotypes. A remarkable piece both visually and for its significance for the development of a new literary and visual aesthetic for Japan in the 20th century. Overall, this copy is very good in rubbed covers. Enclosed in protective modern clasped chitsu case. $650.00 #83273



85157BONVALOT, Gabriel. DE PARIS AU TONKIN A TRAVERS LE TIBET INCONNU. Illustrated by engravings after photographs by Prince HENRI D'ORLEANS. Paris: Librairie Hachette et Cie, 1892. First edition. 510 + [1] pp. 4to., half red morocco with gilt rules, raised bands, gilt spine ornaments and lettering, t.e.g, red marbled paper covered boards. Boards and corners worn, boards with moderate shelfwear and a few scratches. Front joint tender. Marbled endpapers. Color folding map at p. 464 in excellent condition. Clean and tight text. Very good. $350.00 #85157