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== Recognition ==
== Recognition ==
Samurai Shokai submitted a set of metalwork pieces to the [[Japan–British Exhibition]], winning a gold prize.{{sfn|Earle|1999|p=208}}
Samurai Shokai submitted a set of metalwork pieces to the [[Japan–British Exhibition]] of 1910, winning a gold prize.{{sfn|Earle|1999|p=208}}


== Notes ==
== Notes ==

Revision as of 15:44, 17 May 2024

Samurai Shokai company
Company typeart dealer / manufactory
Founded1894 (1894)
FounderNomura Yozo
Headquarters,
Area served
International

The Samurai Shokai company (Japanese: サムライ商会), also written Samurai Shokwai, was an art and antique shop based in Yokohama, Japan which developed an international reputation. Founded in 1894, it was completely destroyed in the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake but was rebuilt and continued to operate until 1965. As well as having a distinctive shop in Yokohama, the company sold by mail order. Some art works created or sold by the company remain in present-day art collections.

History and location

The shop was founded in late 1894[1] by Nomura Yozo[a] who, after travelling to the United States, had decided to become a "bridge spanning the Pacific", educating foreigners about Japanese art and culture. He chose "Samurai" for the shop's name as a Japanese word that foreigners would recognise and because of its connection to the Bushido ("way of the warrior") moral code that he wanted to promote.[2]

Nomura started with no financial backing and no prior experience as a trader. He took out a loan of 175 yen and rented a building in central Yokohama, using some of the money to fix it up and adapt it.[3] The additions included a tower resembling the tower of a castle. The shop's entrance displayed coats of arms, armour, and other distinctively Japanese objects.[4] Having no money to purchase stock, Nomura persuaded his contacts to share objects on consignment.[3] In the first several months, very little was sold, but foreign collectors and Japanese dignitaries started to make large purchases and the business grew in revenue and reputation.[5]

The shop contained lacquerware, metalwork, porcelains, wood carvings and other art objects. It so resembled an art museum that the building had the nickname "The Fine Art Museum of Yokohama". Nomura himself called the shop "the King of Curios".[5]

Whereas other dealers saw foreigners as uninformed customers who could be sold inferior goods, Nomura sought to educate them about Japanese art and win their confidence.[2] By 1900, the shop had developed an international reputation and introduced a mail order service.[6] In 1912, it was reported as doing a million yen of business each year and was one of the most popular locations in the city for American tourists, partly due to its eye-catching central location.[3]

The 1923 Great Kantō earthquake destroyed most of the city of Yokohama, including the shop and many of its art objects but, after a difficult few years,[2] the owners rebuilt the shop and traded much as they had before.[7]

Connected people

"I hate seeing American soldiers chasing after Japanese women. If you are going to stay in Japan, please study Japanese art."

Nomura Yozo[8]

Nomura Yozo (Japanese: 野村洋三) was the founder and president of the company.[2] Born in 1869[4] in Gifu Prefecture, he excelled as a student of English and took three trips to the United States as a translator, making useful contacts and learning foreign customs including shaking hands, which he advocated for for the rest of his life.[2] His success as a businessman led to the position of Director of the Yokohama Chamber of Commerce & Industry.[9] In this capacity, he represented the Japanese merchandising sector at a trade convention in Honolulu in 1932.[10] From 1938 onwards, he was also the proprietor of the Hotel New Grand and greeted guests personally until he was too unwell to do so. He died on 20 March 1965 at the age of 95.[2]

Nomura Michi was the wife of Nomura Yozo; they had married in 1898.[2] Customers at the shop described her as very charming and with a good command of English. An account published in 1932 said "'Samurai Shokai' without Mrs. Nomura is like a flower without color or fragrance."[7] From 1906 to 1908, she made trips to China, Europe, and the United States, acquiring cultural influences that complemented her husband's.[2] Aside from the shop, she led, or was active in, many organisations including the Yokohama branch of the YWCA, of which she was president.[7]

Nomura Mitsumasa was Nomura Yozo's son-in-law and became the manager of the Samurai Shokai company, adopting his father-in-law's family name.[1]

Iwata Shigeho, a silk dealer in Yokohama, taught Nomura Yozo to be an art dealer and gave practical help in the creation of the company.[2]

The American railroad magnate and art collector Charles Lang Freer, who later established the Freer Gallery of Art in Washington D.C., befriended Nomura Yozo in 1895[2] and hired him as a guide.[6] A number of works now in the Freer Gallery of Art were bought through the Samurai Shokai company.[11]

Art works

Samurai cabinets

Other works

Map illustrating the Russo-Japanese War, with message in English (top right) by Nomura Yozo, 1904

Recognition

Samurai Shokai submitted a set of metalwork pieces to the Japan–British Exhibition of 1910, winning a gold prize.[12]

Notes

  1. ^ In this Japanese name, the surname is Nomura.

References

  1. ^ a b Meech, Julia (2011). "Who Was Harry Packard?". Impressions (32). Japanese Art Society of America: 90. ISSN 1095-2136. Retrieved 10 May 2024 – via JSTOR.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Shiraishi, Bon (1 October 1966). "Nomura Yozo". Japan Quarterly. 13 (4). Tokyo: 507–510. Retrieved 10 May 2024 – via ProQuest.
  3. ^ a b c Kinnosuke, Adachi (2 March 1912). "Sales Art and Sales Artists". Collier's: The National Weekly. 48 (24) – via Internet Archive.
  4. ^ a b Bincsik, Monica (5 August 2008). "European collectors and Japanese merchants of lacquer in 'Old Japan': Collecting Japanese lacquer art in the Meiji period (1868–1912)". Journal of the History of Collections. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/jhc/fhn013. Retrieved 2024-05-10.
  5. ^ a b Mochizuki, Kotaro (1910). Japan to-day; a souvenir of the Anglo-Japanese exhibition held in London 1910 (A special number of the "Japan financial and economic monthly"). Tokyo: The Liberal news agency. Retrieved 2024-05-10 – via Internet Archive.
  6. ^ a b "The Miraculous Interventions of Jizo Bosatsu 地蔵菩薩霊験記". National Museum of Asian Art. Smithsonian. Retrieved 10 May 2024.
  7. ^ a b c Kawai, Michi; Kubushiro, Ochimi (1934). "Wives and Widows with Careers". Japanese women speak: A message from the Christian women of Japan to the Christian women of America. Central Committee on the United Study of Foreign Missions. pp. 143–144 – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ Meech, Julia (2011). "Who Was Harry Packard?". Impressions (32). Japanese Art Society of America: 92. ISSN 1095-2136. Retrieved 10 May 2024 – via JSTOR.
  9. ^ "Institute Notes". Pacific Affairs. 5 (5): 479. 1932. ISSN 0030-851X. Retrieved 10 May 2024.
  10. ^ "Japan Leaders to Attend Trade Meet in Hawaii". San Francisco Business. San Francisco: San Francisco Chamber of Commerce. 13 April 1932. p. 3 – via Internet Archive.
  11. ^ "Samurai Shokai". National Museum of Asian Art. Smithsonian. Retrieved 10 May 2024.
  12. ^ Earle 1999, p. 208.

[[Category:Japanese art dealers]] [[Category:Antiques dealers]] [[Category:20th century in Japan]] [[Category:Japanese companies established in 1894]] [[Category:Companies based in Yokohama]] [[Category:1965 disestablishments in Japan]]