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hotoke antiques
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GREETING - hotoke antiques [BCC]

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Hi everyone,

How are you doing today?
Enjoying vacation on the beach now? or checking my website during working hours as usual?
Either way, I wish you are just fine and healthy.

First of all as notice, we just did minor change for this website because we were required to renew our old website creation software. Then, we will possibly change it a little more later as the good opportunity for us.

Second, our latest auctions will end very soon, so please don't miss those out for the better season with less competitors, as considered.

Next, as so in the summer time, we are not going to list so many items at eBay auction. So, if there are anything in particular that are unlisted here and you are looking for, please feel free to let us know its specific details, then be looking forward to being offered from us. (Reference: "request")

Last, our selected item is now exhibited at MAK - Austrian Museum of Applied Arts / Contemporary Art (http://www.mak.at/e/jetzt/f_jetzt.htm), for the exhibition of THINGS. plain & simple (13.06.2012 - 07.10.2012 MAK Exhibition Hall). So, please stop by if you visit Vienna.

Thank you, and have a wonderful day!

All the best,


Dai Okumura
http://hotoke-antiques.com
http://okumuradai.tumblr.com


SALE!

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THINGS.
plain & simple
13.06.2012 - 07.10.2012
MAK Exhibition Hall

The exhibition--based on the MAK collection--THINGS. plain & simple views the principle of simplicity from greatly diverse perspectives, not only as a premise of aesthetics but also in the context of socio-political and sociological phenomena.

In an experiment conceived by the MAK curators, THINGS. plain & simple unites three parallel theme exhibitions: three chief curators have planned out the three exhibition sections to trace the aesthetics of simplicity in European and also in Asian art history. Over the centuries, simplicity and reduction have continually had a formative influence in virtually periodic waves on objects of utility and the applied arts.

When addressing furniture design, simplicity is investigated first and foremost as a design problem of Modernism, whereas the exhibition section on the simplicity of everyday objects concentrates on the counterpole of practical simplicity in using things and also the unadorned simplicity associated with luxury. The investigation of Asian art history places simplicity in relation to the way of life and view of the world, and simultaneously to European tendencies.

This exhibition does not attempt to give any answers or define concepts in a plain and simple way. Our primary aim is to motivate the visitor to take a trip through the histories and centuries of style, to make up his and her own definition of what is plain and simple, and to discover--and this is not so simple!--that it in fact deals with an extremely complex field of ideas.

Plain Furniture
Functionalism and purism, modesty and moderation, poverty and luxury: surveying plain furniture design from the Biedermeier epoch to the early 20th century and from the interwar period up to the present day, the Plain Furniture exhibition segment covers the full range of associations that simplicity evokes. Exemplary of this stylistic diversity is a selection of table situations in the show--living-room and kitchen tables, but also desks and working tables plus chairs and stools from the early 19th century onward: it was the time when simple functionalism first became a relevant aesthetic quality in the design of objects of everyday use.

Plain Useful / Luxuriously Simple

In the exhibition segment named Plain Useful / Luxuriously Simple,
exhibits of ceramics, precious or base metals, glass, and textiles
illustrate the development of simplicity in everyday utensils from the 15th century up until today. Cellar and kitchen utensils that were developed for functionality with clear shapes and sparse ornamentation are on exhibit in the show as is luxurious, prestigious table and silver - ware in which the ideal of simplicity of design finds expression for aesthetic reasons.

Simplicity: The East-Asian Way
In the countries of Eastern Asia, the turn toward simplicity can be first observed in China in the 11th century, instigated by scholar-officials and occurring in parallel to the transition from military state to civil administration. Drawing on the flourishing Chan Buddhism as well as on ancient vernacular ancient philosophical traditions, the new ruling class defined their own, mostly socio-politically motivated signature aesthetics. Reduction was seen as an expression of exemplary modesty and also began to inform the design of everyday utility objects. Although Japan--with a feudal military caste remaining in power well into the 19th century--saw a political development contrary to that of China, the concept of "modesty" also found a--depoliticized--form of expression there. Not literally translatable, the dual notion of "wabi-sabi" refers to a sophisticated sense of the beauty of simplicity.

Curators
Sebastian Hackenschmidt, MAK Curator Furniture and Woodwork; Elisabeth Schmuttermeier, MAK Curator Metal and Wiener Werkstätte Archive; Johannes Wieninger, MAK Curator Asia

  The exhibition is accompanied by the magazine MAK/ZINE #1/2012, edited by Christoph Thun-Hohenstein, contributions by Elfriede Jelinek and Detlev Schöttker as well as Sebastian Hackenschmidt, Christian Höller, Fatima Naqvi, Elisabeth von Samsonow, Elisabeth Schmuttermeier, Johannes Wieninger, interviews Jasper Sharp / Doris Krüger and Simon Rees / Jan Norrman, German/English, 144 pages, MAK/Volltext Vienna 2012, € 9,90. Available at the [MAK Design Shop]


Guided tours
Sat, Sun 3 p.m. (in German)
Continuous information service and short tours
Sat 1-3 p.m. (in German)

Special guided tours by advance booking: Gabriele Fabiankowitsch,
+43 1 711 36-298,
education@MAK.at


Opening hours
Tue 10 a.m.-10 p.m.
Wed-Sun 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Mon closed
Free Admission on
Tuesdays 6-10 p.m.

ADMISSION
€ 7,90 / reduced € 5,50

Free Admission for children and teens up to 19, the unemployed and student groups accompanied by teachers.
Tour contribution € 2,00




 





MAK 

http://www.mak.at/e/jetzt/f_jetzt.htm


http://hotoke-antiques.com

http://okumuradai.tumblr.com


ENDING SOON

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request

" If you are looking for some specific oriental art pieces (mainly Japanese, Chinese and Korean) which are not listed on this website or are hardly able to be found around you, we would like you to rely upon it that we will be able to meet your request offering through private transaction.
Since we actually have a wide range of powerful connections in Japan (from the influential dealers to private successors, and of course from our own stock), we have been able to satisfy many international connoisseurs and collectors for years to constantly keep on dealing through this private transaction as our achievement.
So, please just don't hesitate to contact us at first.
~"   http://hotoke-antiques.com/pg244.html

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