Modern Japanese Ceramics Pottery Contemporary

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8 Bridge Japanese Lacquered Screen by Okada Yuji

8 Bridge Japanese Lacquered Screen by Okada Yuji


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Directory: Artists: Lacquer: Contemporary: Item # 1484049

Please refer to our stock # 24 when inquiring.
Modern Japanese Ceramics
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23 Murasakino Monzen-cho, Kita-ward Kyoto 603-8216
075-201-3497
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 $22,000.00 
A tribute to classical literature and design, the zig-zagging eight bridges march through a wetland of blossoming iris on the black lacquer ground of this two panel screen by Okada Yuji. Lead, mother of pearl and Jewel beetle wing inlay on black lacquer with gold maki-e design. Each panel is 61.5 x 120 cm (24 x 47-1/4 inches) or roughly 120 cm (four feet) square. It is in excellent condition, directly from the Okada family.
Due to size the cost of shipping will be accrued separately.
The Eight Bridges originates from "The Tales of Ise" - a collection of episodes, attributed to the poet Ariwara no Narihara (825-880), about the life of a man on a journey from the capital into Eastern Japan. In Mikawa, the man and his companions stop to rest beside the Eight Bridges which ford eight channels that run through a marsh filled with irises.
"They arrived a place called Yatsuhashi (Eight Bridges), in the land of Mikawa, so named from the eight bridges spanning the streams that flowed out in all directions like the legs of a spider. They dismounted in the shade of a tree beside this marsh to eat their dried rice cakes. Irises were blooming beautifully in the marsh, and someone suggested they compose a poem on the theme of Travel, with the first syllable of each line to spell the word for iris, ka.ki.tsu.ba.ta. He composed this:
Karakomono, kitsutsu narenishi, tsuma shi areba, harubaru kinuru, tabi o shi zo omou
My wife, dear to me as a long-worn robe, swathing my thoughts with love, through these long distances
Subsequently the theme became a readily recognizable reference through many aspects of Japanese art and culture. Perhaps most famously the 18th century ‘Irises at Yatsuhashi’ pair of six-panel folding screens, by Ogata Kōrin depicts the Eight Bridges design running diagonally across the screens, between clumps of blue irises against a background of gold leaf.
Okada Yuji was born in Kyoto in 1948 and graduated with honors from the Kyoto Hiyoshi-ga-oka High School Lacquer Course, Receiving top prize for his graduation project. In 1969 he apprenticed under Ito Hiroshi, and the following year was accepted into the Kyoten (Kyoto Prefectural Art Exhibition) as well as the Kyoto Kogei Bijutsu Sakka Kyokai exhibition (Kyoto Kogei Association of artists) where he would be awarded. This begins his solo career. In 1972 he establishes himself as an independent artist, and his work is accepted into the Nitten National Exhibition. In 1973 he is accepted into the Nihon Gendai Kogeiten (Modern Crafts Exhibition). He would subsequently exhibit regularly with the above mentioned Nitten, Nihon Gendai Kogeiten, Kyoten, Kyoto Kogei Bijutsu Sakka Kyokai and later at the Urushi no Bi-ten (Nihon Shikko Kyokai Japanese Lacquer Association) exhibitions as well as solo and group shows, receiving many awards over the years. Later serving as a judge at several of these events. Throughout the 70s and early 80s he would receive numerous awards. In 1985 he took a professorship at the Dohda Art School. 1996 he enters a new phase, having become well known for restoration of lacquer arts, he begins to actively promote restoration work in addition to creating his own artwork. He would go on to restore over 3500 works of lacquer art before 2022. In 1999 he exhibits three Dry-Lacquer works at the New York Art Festival. This is a turning point in his career, when he begins debuting his latest works overseas in Germany, England and America. He retires from the Kyoto City Dohda Art School in 2003 and establishes a lacquer research center in the Ninenzaka area of Eastern Kyoto. In 2006 he opens the Lacquer Studio Shiun to pass on skills to a younger generation and becomes a member of the International Council of Museums Committee for Conservation. Post 2008 he concentrated on sharing his knowledge and technique with students and on the promotion of lacquer art through symposiums and events around the globe while at the same time continued to research into the techniques and restoration of lacquer artworks. Work by the artist is held in the collections of: the Minneapolis Institute of Art, Denver Art Museum, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Metropolitan Museum of Fine Arts New York, New Orleans Museum of Fine Arts, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Kiyomizu Sannenzaka Museum and Shanghai Art Museum among many others.