A majestic early 20th Century Japanese bronze study of a standing elphant with its head turned and its trunk lowered with very fine intricate hand finished surface detail and good colour. A very good example of bronze casting from the 'Tokyo School' during the early 20th C, late Meji period.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Height: 21 cm
Width: 31 cm
Condition: Excellent Original Condition
Circa: 1910
Materials: Bronze
SKU: 9150
ABOUT
Tokyo School
Japanese Okimono Okimono is a Japanese term meaning “ornament for display; objet d’art; decorative object”, typically displayed in a tokonoma “alcove” or butsudan “Buddhist altar”.The Japanese okimono compounds oku “put; place; set; lay out; assign; station; leave” and mono “thing; object; article”. The Oxford English Dictionary defines the loanword okimono, “A standing ornament or figure, especially one put in a guest room of a house”, and records the first usage in 1886 by William Anderson. Japanese okimono may be a small Japanese carving, similar to, but larger than netsuke. Unlike netsuke, which had a specific purpose, Japanese okimono were purely decorative and were displayed in the tokonoma. During the Meiji period many Japanese okimono were made for export to the west.