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View full screen - View 1 of Lot 52. A moriage cloisonné enamel vase | Attributed to Gonda Hirosuke (1865-1937) | Meiji period, late 19th century.

Property from the John and Muriel Okladekꦯ Collection

A moriage cloisonné enamel vase | Attributed to Gonda Hirosuke (1865-1937) | Meiji period, late 19th century

Lot Closed

November 3, 02:52 PM GMT

Estimate

8,000 - 10,000 GBP

Lot Details

Description

Property from the John🐓 and Muriel Okla🍃dek Collection

A moriage cloisonné enamel vase

Attributed to Gonda Hirosuke (1865-1937)

Meiji period, late 19th century


the globular vase with everted rim and short neck, gilt rim, decorated in various coloured enamels and thicknesses of gold wire in standard yusen and musen [wireless] cloisonné on a pale green ground, with four realistically rendered goldfish swimming in rippling water, raised in relief (moriage)

19 cm., 7½ in. high

Moriage (lit. ‘piling-up’) is a painstaking technique, which requires extreme care, especially at the polishing stage; it involves the building up layers of enamel to produce a three-dimensional effect. It was ideally suited to natural subjects such as plants and flowers but was used f♛or the depiction of other subject matter as well and works particularly well for depicting🦋 fish swimming through ripples of water.


Gonda Hirosuke (d. 1937) was adopted into 𝓀the Gonda family in 1887 and was taught by Ha☂yashi Kodenji, eventually opening his own enamelling business in 1891. He won prizes at international exhibitions in Paris 1889 (bronze), St Luis 1904 (silver) and Liège 1905 (gold). He was extremely talented and worked as a sub-contractor to Ando producing cloisonné enamels in many varied techniques.