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A massive cloisonné enamel vase with a pale grey ovoid body worked in silver wire with two eagles, one perched on a pine branch, the other below, on a rocky ledge scattered with grasses, bamboo, and autumn leaves. The reverse with birds flying above turbulent water beneath branches of pine laden with snow. The neck is decorated with alternate red and white bands of chrysanthemums and paulownia, the upper part with applied stars. The sides fitted with chrysanthemum-form handles hung with patterned swags of simulated drapery. The base is decorated with formal foliate motifs. The vase originally formed part of a three-piece garniture made for the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893. In the catalogue, the vases of the garniture are described as being eight feet, eight inches (264 cm) tall, 'the largest examples of Cloisonné enamel ever made'. The construction of this vase suggests that there is a section missing between the main body of the vase and its foot, though this might not account for the great difference in size noted here. It seems probable that the carved wooden pedestals, as described in the catalogue, were included in the measurement. The catalogue is at pains to explain the iconography and to credit the artists: 'The designs on the vases were the idea of Mr. Shin Shinwoda, Special Counsellor for Arts of the Japanese Commission to the World's Columbian Exposition. Their manufacture was undertaken by Mr. Shirozayemon Suzuki, of yokohama, with the co-operation of Mr. Seizayemon Tsunekawa, at Nagoya. The original design was painted by Mr. Kanpo Araki, of Tokyo, and the black ink sketch on the copper was made by Kiosai Oda, of Nagoya. The men directly in charge of making the vases were Gisaburo Tsukamoto and Kihio ye Hayashi, of Toshima [...]The bronze American eagle (on the censer) was made by Yukimune Sugiura, of Tokyo. The general design represents the seasons of the year [...] and the two eagles, autumn; while on the reverse [...] a winter scene is portrayed. The same design also symbolizes three virtues – wisdom, honesty and strength, symbolised respectively, by the dragon, chickens and eagles. Another idea conveyed by the front design is, that the dragon typifies China; the two eagles, Russia; the group of chickens, the Corean Islands, and the rising sun, the Empire of Japan; while the bronze eagle of the cover of the censer is the American eagle. The silver stars inlaid on the horizontal red and white stripes [...] are emblematic of the American stars and stripes'.
Title
Vase
Date
c.1893
Medium
cloisonné enamel, silver wire
Accession number
20
Work type
Sculpture