The Raymond and Frances Bushell Collection of Netsuke: A Legacy at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Netsuke are Japanese miniature sculptures used as counterweights
for objects suspended from a man's sash. This art form peaked during the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when carvers produced masterpieces
in a vast range of materials and subjects.
Raymond Bushell was
considered one of the foremost experts on netsuke in the world, and the
works he and his wife, Frances, gave to the Los Angeles County Museum of
Art are a distillation of the finest netsuke collection ever formed. It
includes superb examples by all of the netsuke masters as well as
artists who produced comparatively few netsuke, and examples of rare
subjects and unusual materials. In The Raymond and Frances Bushell
Collection of Netsuke: A Legacy at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art,
exquisite color photography and scholarly insights bring alive this
amazing tradition. It features more than 820 netsuke, with accompanying
text that gives a complete overview of changing tastes in netsuke
collecting and carving throughout its history and into the present day.
Each netsuke has a detailed description that places the subject in the
context of Japanese life and history, and gives important information
about the carver or technique. The enormous variety of netsuke subjects
are thoroughly examined, including famous battles and samurai, kabuki
and noh actors and plays, scandalous stories, animals and imaginary
creatures, Buddhist sages, and Shinto rituals. Essays by Hollis Goodall
and Sebastian Izzard examine the sources of subject matter, development
of regional styles, and trends in Japanese art as reflected in netsuke.
Odile Madden discusses techniques used by carvers to create ivory
netsuke. Virginia Atchley, Neil Davey,and Robert T. Singer describe the
art of netsuke, Raymond Bushell as a collector, and his relationship
with the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Also included are maps of
ancient and modern Japan, an illustrated reference of 535 artists'
signatures, a glossary, and a detailed index. With 827 netsuke and 20
inro shown in more than 1,000 color illustrations, this catalogue will
delight and inform netsuke collectors and initiate other art lovers into
this expressive and beautiful art form.