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Thomsen Gallery
9 East 63rd Street
New York City, NY 10065 , United States
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212.288.2588
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Boy's Dream, mid-1930s
Price Upon Request
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Tear Sheet Print
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Description
Koyo Miura
Boy's Dream, mid-1930s
Two-panel folding screen; ink and colors on paper
Size 59¼ x 48¼ in. (150.5 x 122.5 cm)
T-4491
A pupil of the famous painter and teacher Kōgyō Terasaki, Kōyō Miura made his national debut at the Seventh Bunten exhibition in 1913. After traveling in Korea in 1915 and 1916, he submitted genre scenes from that country to the Ninth and Tenth Bunten, but at Twelfth Bunten in 1918 he reverted to a traditional Chinese figure subject. The present work is in a different style from his Bunten period, closely resembling the kimono with military motifs that were so popular at that time (for examples, see Jacqueline M. Atkins, Wearing Propaganda: Textiles on the Home Front in Japan, Great Britain, and America, Yale University Press, 2005).
Here, a small child dreams of waving flags under a Mitsubishi Ki-1, a cumbersome, poorly armored heavy bomber deployed briefly in northern China and Manchuria during the mid-1930s. Comforting domestic images (the family’s pet dog, rustic dwellings) contrast with the helmet and rifle that lie at the child’s head, perhaps the property of his father who has been conscripted into the Imperial Japanese Army. His futon (quilt) is patterned with samurai helmets and cherry blossoms, whose impermanence made them an enduring metaphor for the transitory nature of human life, especially in wartime. The painting’s somber message is belied by the artist’s choice of a range of cheerful pastel hues. -
More Information
Documentation: Documented elsewhere (similar item) Period: 1920-1949 Creation Date: 1930's Styles / Movements: Asian Art Incollect Reference #: 669350 -
Dimensions
W. 48.25 in; H. 59.25 in; W. 122.56 cm; H. 150.5 cm;
Message from Seller:
Thomsen Gallery, located at 9 East 63rd Street in New York City, specializes in important Japanese paintings, screens, scrolls, ceramics, ikebana bamboo baskets, and lacquer objects, as well as contemporary works by select artists. Owned by Erik and Cornelia Thomsen, the gallery offers a wealth of expertise in Japanese art, with global clientele including collectors and museums. Reach them at 212-288-2588 or info@thomsengallery.com
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