Haughton International Asian Art Fair
Byöbu or folding screen in two panels, painted on paper in sumi ink, gofun or clam shell gesso and mineral pigments, with a scene from the margins of a deep forest glade focusing on a weasel pausing amid wild strawberries. Signed on the lower left by the artist: Bokuyö, and sealed: Bokuyö (Katayama Bokuyö, the gö or art name of Katayama Kenzö, 1900 – 1937). Shöwa 3 or 1928. (23D14). Kagedo Japanese Art, Seattle WA.
NEW YORK and LONDON.- Now in its twelfth year, The Haughton International Asian Art Fair, has, since its launch, been widely lauded as the world's leading Asian art fair and the centrepiece of New York's annual Asia Week.
Founded in 1996, the fair has consistently brought together a large group of the world's leading dealers in Near Eastern, Indian, Himalayan, Tibetan, South East Asian and Far Eastern works of art. It attracts institutional and private buyers from the United States, Europe and the Far East, presenting them with the opportunity to view and buy from among the rarest and most important Asian art on the market, from the earliest pieces through to contemporary. Lire la suite http://www.artdaily.com/section/news/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=19664
Chinese Art Deco Carpet, circa 1930, 2’1” x 3’9”, Sandra Whitman, San Fransisco
