Lot Essay
Ingenious movable sculptures of animals are the invention of Japanese metalsmiths trained in the manufacture of samurai armor. The Myochin family of armorers is credited with the first sculptures of this type in the eighteenth century. In relative peacetime, the demand for arms and armor, except for display purposes, had slowed. To meet the changes in demand, the Myochin expanded their repertoire into metalwork of a decorative and symbolic nature. Some see these articulated models as the culmination of the armorer’s skill and imagination. Known as jizai okimono, literally “free display objects”, these intricate sculptures are a unique genre of Japanese sculptural art.
The restoration of the Japanese emperor in 1868 and the dismantling of the samurai domains further impacted the tradition of metalwork in place by the fifteenth century. Rapid industrialization and Japan’s decision to compete economically on a world scale encouraged new artists and ateliers who had not trained in the Myochin school. There are several Myochin family artists with the name Muneaki. The style of the work and signature suggest this work maybe the work by Myochin Muneaki from late Edo period who was descendant of Myochin Family retained for the Sakai Family of Himeji Province.
The restoration of the Japanese emperor in 1868 and the dismantling of the samurai domains further impacted the tradition of metalwork in place by the fifteenth century. Rapid industrialization and Japan’s decision to compete economically on a world scale encouraged new artists and ateliers who had not trained in the Myochin school. There are several Myochin family artists with the name Muneaki. The style of the work and signature suggest this work maybe the work by Myochin Muneaki from late Edo period who was descendant of Myochin Family retained for the Sakai Family of Himeji Province.