Japanese Works of Art - 20th May 2026
Lot 722
FOUR JAPANESE LACQUER INRŌ AND NETSUKE WITH ANIMALS
Estimate £2,000 - £3,000 | Hammer £2540
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Description
FOUR JAPANESE LACQUER INRŌ AND NETSUKE WITH ANIMALS
MEIJI ERA, 19TH/20TH CENTURY
The first a four-case inrō with the twelve zodiac animals in a landscape, possibly signed Kōsai saku with a red seal pot underneath, attached to a wood netsuke carved as a dragon emerging from a mikan; another inrō depicting large chickens in a bamboo grove, with a wood netsuke of a small mouse, the rodent gnawing on the back of its paw, the eyes inlaid, signed Ichimin; the third with horses and the last with insects amongst tall grasses, both with wood yama-inu (wild dog) netsuke, one signed Masatsugu; all the inrō variously rendered in iroe-hiramakie, kirikane, nashiji, aogai, hira-kanagai and roiro, the largest 8.7cm. (4)
Provenance: from the collection of Mrs Frederica (Freda) Cook (1856-1925), and thence by descent. In 1887, Freda married Wyndham Francis Cook, the younger son of Sir Francis Cook. Sir Francis (1817-1901) was a wealthy textile magnate who notably owned the Gothic palace on Montserrate in Cintra, Portugal (previously subleased by William Beckford), where he created a Japanese garden. He was given the title of Marquess of Montserrate by the King of Portugal in 1886, and first Baronet Cook the same year.
Sir Francis was an avid art collector, amassing one of the most important private art collections of the 19th century, housed primarily at Doughty House in Richmond. His collection featured pieces by renowned artist, including Jan van Eyck's The Three Marys at the Sepulchre, Velázquez's Old Woman Cooking Eggs, Fra Angelico and Filippo Lippi's Adoration of the Magi, and Rembrandt's Portrait of a Boy. In 1900, he bought a painting that would eventually sell for $450 million at auction: the famous Salvator Mundi by Leonardo da Vinci.
When her husband died in 1905, Freda was left £1,224,381 (approximately £189 million today). Her own will made the news in 1925 when the Time published an article entitled "Will as Long as a Novel": it was handwritten, included 95,940 words, 1066 pages, and still holds today the Guinness World Records title for the longest will ever written.