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Japanese Bronze Sculpture By Takahashi Kaishu - Tiger - (japan, Showa, 1926–1989, Around 1950

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Japanese Bronze Sculpture By Takahashi Kaishu - Tiger - (japan, Showa, 1926–1989, Around 1950
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Japanese Bronze Sculpture By Takahashi Kaishu - Tiger - (japan, Showa, 1926–1989, Around 1950-photo-2
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Japanese Bronze Sculpture By Takahashi Kaishu - Tiger - (japan, Showa, 1926–1989, Around 1950-photo-3
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Okimono or sculpture in the form of a tiger. Cast bronze, inlaid with silver. Signed on the reverse with the artist's signature inlaid in silver 勇, Isamu. Showa period, circa 1950.

With the tomobako or original box, inscribed on the exterior of the lid: 加賀象嵌, Kaga Zogan or Kaga Inlaid and titled "return of the tiger", and on the reverse of the lid signed: 介州作, Kaishu saku or Made by Kaishu, and sealed.

Takahashi KAISHU (高橋介州, 1905-2004), artist name of Takahashi Isamu, born in 1905 in Kanazawa, graduated from the Tokyo School of Fine Arts in 1929. The same year, he was admitted to the Teiten (帝展, exhibition organized by the Imperial Academy of Arts from 1919 to 1934). In 1930, Kaishu exhibited in Belgium at the World's Fair and received an award, also winning a gold medal in 1933 at the Chicago World's Fair. After the war, Takahashi Kaishu continued to exhibit. In 1982, he was designated an Important Intangible Cultural Property (commonly referred to as Ningen Kokuho or Living National Treasure).  He is one of the most prominent artists who continued to work in the Kaga metalwork tradition involving bronze casting and soft metal inlay. His modernist adaptations of traditional techniques are widely collected.

Kaga metalwork, called Kaga Zogan, was first made when the second lord of Kaga, Maeda Toshinaga (前田 利長, 1562–1614), invited a metalwork specialist from the Goto family of Kyoto to develop ornamental techniques in his fiefdom.

For another of his pieces, in the collection of the Ishikawa Prefectural Museum, c.f. The Art of Ishikawa, plate 288.
 

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Cloisonne Bronze Zoomorphic Asia 19th Century
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