A beautiful hand paint color, and ink on paper woodblock vertical print. Edo Period, features a stunning landscape of the city Hitachi tucked in the valley of Mount Tsukuba. Full title Hitachi, Mount Tsukuba. Original print can be found in the 1860s series, One Hundred Views of Famous Places in the Provinces, by the ukiyo-e artist Hiroshige II (1826-1869). Title series on the top right. Title print on the top right. Artist signature on the lower left. Print placed on the mat paper. Mat: 13"W x 18"H. Print size: 9.75"W x 14.75"H. Artist: Hiroshige IIIssued: 19th centuryCountry of Origin: JapanCondition: Age related wear.
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A BOX OF PHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENT, to include a Canon 1100D digital SLR camera with 18-55mm zoom lens and 55-250mm zoom lens, battery charger is missing, together with a 35mm Olympia film camera, Hitachi digital camera, Olympus digital camera with corroded battery terminals, 58mm filter set, camera cases etc
A SANYO HI FI with remote and matching speakers (CD doesn't read), a Schneider mini Hi Fi with matching speakers and remote, an eMotion 18.5in TV with remote (all PAT pass and working unless stated) and a Hitachi SDT-116 Music Centre with speakers ( PAT fail as no plug fitted) drive belt missing but motor and needle OK, tape not turning)
A DYNATRON HFC 72 RADIOGRAM, on cabriole legs, with a Garrard SP25 MK1V turntable, a Sony TC-118SD cassette recorder, cabinet width 97cm x depth 43cm x height 64cm, pair of speakers, along with a Period High Fidelity radiogram with an impulse ST201 tuner, and Garrard 125SB turntable, Hitachi D-2330 stereo cassette tape deck, and a pair of speakers (condition report: PAT fail to two cables connected to one plug, Dynatron cabinet and contents in working order, fidelity cabinet drive belt need replacing, tape played doesn't work and radio switches to not latch, fidelity speaker cabinets scratched) (6)
Construction vehicles (x5) Lot comprises:JCB 525-58 Telescopic loader construction model to 1:35 scale. Manufactured by Joal, in original box in mint condition.JCB 712 articulated dumper to 1:35 scale. Manufactured by Joal in original box in mint condition,Hitachi LX70 wheel loader to 1:40 scale. In original box in mint condition.Dynapac CC232 Vibratory roller articulated body swivelling and rotating rear roller and rotating front roller, driver's seat also swivels. Not in box however in very good condition.Caterpillar C245 excavator to 1:50 scale. Manufactured by NZG, Germany. Not in box however in very good condition.
Nine children's model construction kits comprising Ros Metalkit with plastic parts, Fiat-Hitachi GRU CX500, and a Fiat-Hitachi RUSPA Compattatrice, two Marks and Spencers tractor and aeroplane kits, Steel Mechanix Bi-plane, Batmobile 3D puzzle, three Metal Mechanic (9).Condition Report: Cannot confirm all parts are present, in playworn condition
HO RAKUMIN: A WOOD AND LACQUER MASK NETSUKE OF A SHOJOBy Ho Rakumin (1804-1877), signed Ho Hogen 鴇 法眼 with kakihanJapan, Edo/Tokyo, second half of 19th centurySkillfully carved as a young man, the pierced mouth opened in a charming smile revealing rows of teeth, the narrowed eyes with recessed pupils, the neatly incised eyebrows and parted hair as well as the thin lips lacquered red. The reverse with a himotoshi bar below the signature Ho Hogen with a kakihan. The artist is Ho Rakumin, for further examples bearing this signature see MCI p. 160.HEIGHT 4.1 cmCondition: Very good condition with minor wear. Provenance: Ex-collection John and Helen Mang. Quinn's Auction Galleries, The Mang Collection of Japanese Netsuke, 7 December 2012, Falls Church, Virginia, USA, lot 119. European collection P. Jacquesson, acquired from the above.Shojo is used exclusively for the play Shojo (The Dancing Orangutan). Despite the name, the mask is that of a smiling youth, certainly not an ape at all. The distinguishing feature of Shojo is his overall reddish color, the color which symbolizes the drunkard. Shojo's hair is painted downward on his forehead in thin separated strands or bangs. For his dance the actor always wears a wig of long red hair with the Shojo mask. The dance symbolizes a drunken orangutan. Some Noh schools use a group of seven dancers all wearing Shojo masks to represent the orangutan.Ho Rakumin (1804-1877) was born in Tsuchiura in Hitachi Province (now Ibaraki Prefecture). He received the honorary title Hogen and was, together with Hojitsu, one of the best netsuke carvers in Tokyo.Literature comparison: Compare a related wood netsuke, also with red hair, by Keizan, illustrated in Joly, Henri L. (1966) The W. L. Behrens Collection, Part 1, Netsuke, pl. IV, no. 186, and in Meinertzhagen, Frederick / Lazarnick, George (1986) MCI, Part A, p. 321.Museum comparison: A polychrome wood mask of Shojo, dated to the Muromachi period, 15th-16th century, is in the Tokyo National Museum, collection reference no. C-1535.
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