Japanese Antique Wooden Relief Panel — Geisha / Oiran Beauty with Fan Kanban

$325.00
$325.00 $0.00
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Description

Japanese Antique Wooden Relief Panel — Geisha / Oiran Beauty with Fan

A striking and large antique Japanese wooden relief panel (kanban) depicting a beautifully dressed oiran (高級遊女・花魁) or geisha in full ceremonial kimono, holding an open golden folding fan. This type of decorative panel was traditionally used as a shop or establishment signboard (kanban) in the entertainment districts (hanamachi or yukaku) of Meiji to Taisho era Japan.

Details:

  • Dimensions: H approx. 84cm × W approx. 23cm × D approx. 4.2cm (H 33" × W 9" × D 1.6")
  • Weight: 3.4kg
  • Material: Wood, hand-carved relief with polychrome paint and gold detailing
  • Condition: Antique — see notes below

Features:

  • Full-length figure of an elegant beauty in layered kimono — deep navy blue outer robe with gold floral motifs (kamon-style), vermilion red inner robe, and warm orange furisode sleeve
  • Beautifully carved gold folding fan held in one hand, other hand raised in a graceful gesture
  • Elaborately carved hairstyle (shimada or taka shimada) with gold kanzashi hair ornament
  • Delicate facial features with red lips — carved in the classical bijin-ga (美人画) tradition
  • Two-tone wooden geta sandals visible at hem
  • Metal hanging hook attached to reverse for wall display
  • The natural wood grain of the backing board creates a warm, aged atmosphere that perfectly complements the polychrome figure

Condition Notes:

  • Right hand thumb area: minor chip/loss (as shown in photos)
  • The wooden backing board has developed a natural warp/bow over time — please refer to the side-view photos for reference
  • General surface wear, minor paint loss, and aging consistent with antique status
  • No structural damage — solid and stable
  • Overall impression remains very strong and visually compelling

Background: Such decorative relief panels were a hallmark of Japan's ukiyo (浮世) entertainment culture. Depicting idealized beauties (bijin) in the style of ukiyo-e woodblock prints, they served both as commercial signage and as art objects celebrating the aesthetic ideals of the era. Surviving examples of this scale and quality are increasingly rare.



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