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Large Japanese Kobe Ningyo Dice Man Toy browse these categories for related items... All Items: Antiques:Regional Art:Asian:Japanese:Dolls: Pre 1920: item # 886772 Please refer to our stock # 4-279A5 when inquiring.
B & C Antiques P. O. Box 291 Derby, CT 06418 203-929-7312 Guest Book $275 |
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Large Japanese wooden Kobe toy or “ningyo” (doll) in the form of a man wearing an oversized top hat. Early 20th century. The top of his hat unscrews to reveal a red compartment which holds two small dice. His bone eyes protrude when the figure is moved, and his open mouth reveals a red tongue. His two wood arms are outstretched, and he holds a cane in his right hand and a bone wand in his left hand. The wood has been lacquered black to replicate ebony. Kobe toys take their name from the port of Kobe, where the main period of production lasted from1870 to the 1920’s. These small wooden figures are simply hand-carved and the colors subdued – natural wood, blackened, or small pieces of ebony, inlaid bone or ivory eyes, and a red mouth. Kobe toys always portray a Negroid human figure. The Japanese were fascinated by the colorful black faces and features of sailors on ships from Africa and America who disembarked in Kobe when the port was reopened in 1868. These subjects became sculpted forever in the form of Kobe toys, which were carved from scraps of ebony or hardwoods by folk art craftsmen. Since all work was done by hand, no two specimens were ever identical. For the most part, these works were sold as souvenirs along the docks of the port of Kobe, and the majority of purchasers were sailors and Western tourists. (See Figure 19 in “Kobe Dolls,” DARUMA 34, for sample of photos of Kobe Dice Men used for taking orders from souvenir shops.) From their origins as relatively cheap souvenirs, Kobe toys have turned into exceedingly rare collector’s items. CONDITION is very good, but the cane in his right hand is not original. DIMENSIONS: 6 ¾” (17.2 cm) high, 3” (7.7 cm) diameter at hat brim. |
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