Eldred’s on Cape Cod conducted its weeklong Asian auctions  beginning with Japanese art on August 23-25, Paul Jacoulet prints  on August 24 and Asian arts on August 26 and 27. The nearly 2,500  lots brought a gross of $2,023,718. There were 1,282 bidders,  with a large percentage of them international participants.   The top lot of the Japanese sale was sold on day one – a pair of  Meiji period silver vases with gold inlay in katakiribori design  selling for $25,300. Other highlights of the first day were a  31-by-47-inch Meiji period watercolor view of Nikko by Bonsai  Loki (Bunya) that brought ten times its estimate to sell for  $21,850, while a Fourteenth/Fifteenth Century brocade-mounted  Buddhist scroll on silk crossed the block at $12,075. An  important Meiji period Yabu Meizan Satsuma pottery jar with Lake  Biwa landscape decoration brought $16,100 and a most unusual  early Twentieth Century inlaid silver and iron box by Shomin sold  for $14,950.   Other notable items were a Meiji period inlaid iron censer for  $11,500 and a Meiji period carved ivory figure group depicting  Fujiwara no Yasumasa and a bandit for $9,775. Two items each  bringing $9,200 were a rare early Eighteenth Century six-panel  Buddhistic screen and a Kamakura bronze temple vase dated 1325  from the Kyo Hokke-ji.   Day two comprised about 370 netsuke, ojime and inro, with the top  lot at $17,250 being an ivory netsuke by Okatomo in the form of a  carp and a waterwheel in curling waves. Other notable sales  included a five-case black and gold lacquer inro by Kajikawa with  netsuke and ojime, $15,525; an ivory netsuke by Tomotada in the  form of a puppy, $14,950; a Kyoto School ivory netsuke of a lion  and pup, $13,800; a wood netsuke of a frog, $9,200; and an ivory  netsuke of a dancing Fukurokuju, $8,625. Jacoulet’s work offered 110 lots with the top lot awatercolor of a young woman of Guam selling for $6,325 to aresident of Guam. Other notable prints were “The Substitute.Mongolia,” $5,175; the set of five Manchurian Princesses, $4,600;”Young Girl of Polowat,” $4,312; the extremely rare “Old South seaIsland Woman,” $3,737; and the last lot of the sale, “On TinianIsland. Marianas,” $3,105.   The Japanese sale continued on Thursday with prints and included  a collection from the Forbes Library in Northampton, Mass. Some  of the top lots were an early Eighteenth Century print by  Masanobu of male and female warriors that brought $2,990, a print  by Charles W. Bartlett of the Taj Mahal dated 1916 sold for  $2,640 and three prints each selling for $2,530 were “Musashi  plain” of a fox viewing his reflection by Yoshitoshi, a Bijin  applying makeup by Kobayakawa Kiyo and a mountain range scene by  Umetaro Azechi.   The two-day Asian arts, with gross sales of $1,005,008, accounted  for nearly half of the week’s sales. The strength of the Asian  sale was in the painting category that secured half of the top 20  lots. The top lot was a scroll painting in colored ink on paper  by Qi Baishi (1864-1975), “Ch’i Pai-Shih,” for $106,000. Other  scroll paintings, which took the majority of the top honors,  included one of a blind musician attributed to Chiang Chiao-ho,  $39,100; a signed and seal marked painting on paper by Hsu  Pei-hung of bamboo in moonlight, $18,400; and a hand scroll on  silk by Ch’iu Ying depicting the beauties of China, $14,375. Other notable scroll paintings included one on paper of ayellow sunflower for $11,500, one on silk after Castiglione (LongShis-ning) of two dogs in a landscape for $11,400 and one byShih-fu Chiu Ying of figures in a landscape for $10,200. Otherpaintings of note were one attributed to Lin Feng-men (1900-1991)of a figure with a horse, $18,000and a collection of four mountedalbum paintings, $10,200.   A Chinese Export carved wood sofa with exquisitely carved  cartouches of sea life and exotic birds on the back and arms was  purchased for $25,300 by a Hong Kong dealer. A 21-inch-tall  Seventeenth Century gilt bronze figure of Buddha sold for $11,500  and a 19-inch tall Ming dynasty bronze figures of Buddha brought  $9,600.   Some of the noteworthy porcelain pieces were a marked Yung Cheng  period blue and white dish for $10,350, a Yung Cheng period Wu  Ts’ai jar for $6,900, a Nineteenth Century carved celadon vase  for $6,325 and a collection of ten Nineteenth Century cups that  made ten times its estimate to sell at $6,000. Of the 318 snuff  bottles offered, the two top lots were interior painted glass  bottles by Ma Shao-hsuan, including a portrait bottle with  mandarin and calligraphy decoration for $11,400 and one in  rectangular form with calligraphy and fan decoration for $6,325. The jade section highlights were a cased scholar’s set inspinach green, $9,600, a white jade figure group with a ram and twoewes, $8,050, and a white jade teapot in three lobed fruit form for$7,475. An exquisite gold, diamond, enamel and pearl necklacebrought $9,200 and a set of four cloisonné enamel panels sold for$9,000.   All prices quoted include the 15 percent buyer’s premium.   For information, 508-385-3116 or www.eldreds.com.          
 
    



 
						