冨嶽三十六景
「冨嶽三十六景」全46作品が今夜オークションにかかります
落札予想額 300~500万ドル
https://www.christies.com/lot/lot-6472565?ldp_breadcrumb=back&intObjectID=6472565&from=salessummary&lid=1
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「冨嶽三十六景」全46作品が今夜オークションにかかります
落札予想額 300~500万ドル
https://www.christies.com/lot/lot-6472565?ldp_breadcrumb=back&intObjectID=6472565&from=salessummary&lid=1
高くて手が出ないです(T^T)
>> imaru2019 さん
全作揃いの付加価値もあるようです>> 1953生まれ さん
昨年まず東京で披露、その後香港、パリで公開ニューヨークでセリですから一応日本人の応札期待している?
運慶「大日如来坐像」の時は真如院が手を挙げましたが
浮世絵ですからね
明石城の障壁画が出品された時、行政に訴えましたが全く相手にされなかった事を思い出します
落札予想額には届かず取引成立
240からスタート、ほとんどせらずに290から動きませんでした
落札額3559000ドル
One Collector’s High Mountain Road to Hokusai
The New York Times 2023.3.18
A professor’s 30-year dream of assembling a complete set of “Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji,” the pinnacle of the artist’s career, leads to an auction.
Jitendra V. Singh was nearly 60, a professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, when he finally bought his first woodblock print by the revered Japanese printmaker Katsushika Hokusai, whose work from the Edo 19th century includes a masterly series, “Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji.”
It was 2013, and Dr. Singh was enchanted by Hokusai’s view of the sacred mountain in Japan, central to each image in the artist’s series: sometimes dominant, sometimes in the background, but always present.
By then Dr. Singh had made three long trips into the Himalayas, gone high-altitude trekking on Mt. Everest, and journeyed to Mount Kailash in Tibet, which is sacred to Hindus.
Fascination with Hokusai and his images has led Singh on a singular quest to assemble the entire “Thirty-Six Views” series (actually there are 46 images.) He completed that challenge in January 2023, and this week, he is selling the entire set at Christie’s. The estimate is $3 million to $5 million.
“I have no desire to show them in my home and gloat over them,” he said. Instead he kept them hermetically sealed inside Japanese boxes. “They are far too delicate,” he said.
It was not simply the beauty of the prints that appealed to Singh, but the subject matter. As a religious Hindu, his mountain trips were emotionally powerful “because climbing the mountains is a metaphor for our lives,” he said. “We are all alone. If you strip away everything, life is a journey.”
His circumambulation of Mount Kailash followed a ritual bath in melted glacier waters of Lake Manasarovar, a sacred lake in Hindu mythology, believed to be formed by Lord Brahma. “Bathing in the lake is said to liberate the worshipper from all the sins of all lifetimes,” he explained. “I thought I needed that bit of divine help.”
Singh did not see his first Hokusai until he was in his 40s and traveling the world. He had grown up in Lucknow, a large city in northern India, one of 11 children from three marriages. “My father was a high-level civil servant,” he said. “Art was considered a frivolity in our house.”
n 1990, he visited Japan, where the mother of a student from back in the United States gave him a high-quality print by Kawase Hasui, one of 20th-century Japan’s most celebrated printmakers, which included an image of a mountain. On his own, Singh settled for cheap reproductions of Hokusai’s “Great Wave Off Kanagawa” and the image known as “Red Fuji,” admiring the mountain’s red tint. “The Hokusais were stunning,” he remembered.
At Mita Arts Gallery, he met Ken Caplan, its owner and confided that if he could afford it, “I would possibly like to buy the whole set.”
Thus began the final stage of his odyssey, which lasted more than 10 years. Caplan would send images of the prints as they became available. “It was very important to keep it secret,’’ Singh recalled. Otherwise sellers, sniffing an eager buyer, would raise prices.
As Singh came to know more about the artist, Hokusai’s long career and commitment to his art also impressed the collector, especially his self-reflections. Hokusai once said that though he had been sketching from the age of 6, “nothing I did before the age of 70 was worthy of attention.’’ If the statement was exaggerated, it was also prescient. The artist embarked on “Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji,” considered the summit of his own creativity, in 1830, when he was 70.
By 2018, Singh had collected 41 prints. “The last five were the hardest to find,’’ he remembered. “I got the last one in January of 2023.” It was “Sazai Hall at the Temple of the Five Hundred Arhats” — a reference to the legendary disciples of Buddha — in which men and women in flowing robes stand on a temple balcony admiring Mount Fuji.
“I had reached my goal.”
He has put his prints into a trust. When they are sold, the money will go into the trust. Singh can withdraw 6% of the value of the trust every year. The balance grows tax-free and will go to charity.
But whatever the outcome of the sale Tuesday, in the view of Andreas Marks, author of “Hokusai: Thirty-Six Views of Mount Fuji,” and the curator for Japanese and Korean Art at the Minneapolis Institute of Art: “The achievement of putting it all together is extraordinary.