BLACK BECKONER 1967

$240.00

【 The Concept 】

The beckoning cat began with a story. A feudal lord, caught in a storm, saw a cat raising its paw at the gate of a ruined temple. He followed it inside. Seconds later, lightning struck the spot where he had been standing. The cat saved his life by doing nothing more than lifting one paw. That gesture became a symbol. For four hundred years, ceramic cats with one raised paw have been placed at the entrances of homes and shops across Japan — not as decoration, but as a standing invitation for good fortune to walk in.

This one is black. In the tradition it comes from, a black cat does not carry bad luck. It absorbs it — the way black cloth absorbs light. A warlord lost in retreat once followed a black cat to a temple and survived the night. That is why the black ones are made. They sit by the door and swallow what should not pass. This one sits upright with its left paw raised above its ear — not waving, beckoning. The left paw calls people. The right arm holds a gold coin stamped with a number so large it stopped being realistic a long time ago. The cat does not care. It is not here to be realistic. It is here to make sure the right things come in and the wrong things do not.

【 The Function 】

A ceramic figure and a coin bank. Fourteen centimeters tall, glazed in solid black, with a slot cut into the back of the head for depositing coins. The left paw is raised. The right arm cradles a gold oval stamped with characters. A red collar circles the neck with a gold bell at the center. A blue apron hangs from the throat. The ears are lined in red on the inside. The eyes are painted in yellow and blue with large black pupils. The base is flat and unglazed. At 210 grams it sits where you put it and does not move until you move it.

【 The Texture 】

Glazed ceramic with a smooth, light-catching surface. The black is not matte — it has the faint shine of iron glaze fired at high temperature. The gold coin shows signs of age: the surface is slightly darkened, the edges are chipped where the paint has worn away over decades. The bell at the collar has traces of green patina. The whiskers are painted in pale blue — three on each side, thin and deliberate. The red inside the ears is bright against the black, like a warning hidden inside something calm. Every color is applied by hand. No two brushstrokes match.

【 Presence 】

It is the object that watches the door. The black body disappears into dark shelves and dim hallways until the gold coin catches the light and gives it away. The raised paw is frozen mid-motion — always calling, never arriving. The blue apron and red collar are the only soft things about it. Everything else is black, solid, and permanent. Put a coin in the slot and it disappears. The cat keeps it. That is the arrangement.

Sourced from a private collection in western Japan.

【 The Concept 】

The beckoning cat began with a story. A feudal lord, caught in a storm, saw a cat raising its paw at the gate of a ruined temple. He followed it inside. Seconds later, lightning struck the spot where he had been standing. The cat saved his life by doing nothing more than lifting one paw. That gesture became a symbol. For four hundred years, ceramic cats with one raised paw have been placed at the entrances of homes and shops across Japan — not as decoration, but as a standing invitation for good fortune to walk in.

This one is black. In the tradition it comes from, a black cat does not carry bad luck. It absorbs it — the way black cloth absorbs light. A warlord lost in retreat once followed a black cat to a temple and survived the night. That is why the black ones are made. They sit by the door and swallow what should not pass. This one sits upright with its left paw raised above its ear — not waving, beckoning. The left paw calls people. The right arm holds a gold coin stamped with a number so large it stopped being realistic a long time ago. The cat does not care. It is not here to be realistic. It is here to make sure the right things come in and the wrong things do not.

【 The Function 】

A ceramic figure and a coin bank. Fourteen centimeters tall, glazed in solid black, with a slot cut into the back of the head for depositing coins. The left paw is raised. The right arm cradles a gold oval stamped with characters. A red collar circles the neck with a gold bell at the center. A blue apron hangs from the throat. The ears are lined in red on the inside. The eyes are painted in yellow and blue with large black pupils. The base is flat and unglazed. At 210 grams it sits where you put it and does not move until you move it.

【 The Texture 】

Glazed ceramic with a smooth, light-catching surface. The black is not matte — it has the faint shine of iron glaze fired at high temperature. The gold coin shows signs of age: the surface is slightly darkened, the edges are chipped where the paint has worn away over decades. The bell at the collar has traces of green patina. The whiskers are painted in pale blue — three on each side, thin and deliberate. The red inside the ears is bright against the black, like a warning hidden inside something calm. Every color is applied by hand. No two brushstrokes match.

【 Presence 】

It is the object that watches the door. The black body disappears into dark shelves and dim hallways until the gold coin catches the light and gives it away. The raised paw is frozen mid-motion — always calling, never arriving. The blue apron and red collar are the only soft things about it. Everything else is black, solid, and permanent. Put a coin in the slot and it disappears. The cat keeps it. That is the arrangement.

Sourced from a private collection in western Japan.

【Context】

  • Identity: Anonymous Provincial Ceramic / Fortune Cat Coin Bank.
  • Origin: Western Province (Historic Ceramic Region), Japan.
  • Technique: Glazed Ceramic, Iron Glaze, Hand-Painted Pigment, Coin Slot Construction.
  • Function: Coin Bank / Fortune Figure / Guardian Object.
    

【 Dimensions (Approx.) 】

  • Height: 14 cm (5.5 in)
  • Width: 8 cm (3.1 in)
  • Weight: 210 g (7.4 oz)
 

RELATED ARCHIVAL SPECIMENS

SCARLET SENTINELS 1960
$185.00

【 The Concept 】

In the Japanese zodiac, the first position belongs to the mouse. Not the dragon, not the tiger — the mouse. The smallest animal in the cycle was given the task of beginning everything. In folk belief, this creature serves a second role: it is the chosen messenger of the god of wealth and harvest. Where the mouse appears, prosperity follows. Where two appear together, the message is twice as certain. An anonymous craftsman in a coastal province understood both roles. They formed two figures from earth — one seated in formal posture, one crouching low as if about to move — dressed them both in red, and placed a clay sphere inside each so that every time they are lifted, a dry rattle sounds from within. The red is not decorative. In Japanese tradition, this color has one purpose: to repel what should not be allowed near.

【 The Function 】

Both figures are dorei — clay bells. Each houses a loose clay sphere that strikes the inner wall when lifted, producing a brief, percussive rattle. In folk practice, this sound served to clear a threshold, a desk, a bedside — any space where misfortune might settle. The larger figure sits upright in ceremonial posture, hands folded. The smaller one crouches forward, alert. Together they create a pair that covers stillness and motion, ceremony and vigilance.

【 The Texture 】

The bodies are white — an unglazed, chalky ground that holds light without reflecting it. Over this, the red garments are painted with a matte mineral pigment that has aged into a warm, uneven tone — darker in the folds, thinner at the edges. The eyes are simple black dots. The whiskers are single brushstrokes. On the back of the larger figure, characters are pressed into the clay before firing — a mark that ties these objects to a specific shrine district in Japan's southern coastal region. The surface is dry, warm, and rough in the way that only unfired earth can be.

【 Presence 】

They are small enough to share a windowsill. The larger one commands attention; the smaller one earns it. Place them together and they become a conversation — one still, one ready. One guarding, one scouting. The rattle is faint, almost private, audible only to the person holding them. That is the point. The protection they offer was never meant to be loud.

Sourced from a private collection in southern coastal Japan.

PARADE HORSE 1966
$250.00

【 The Concept 】

In the northern provinces of Japan, the horse was not livestock. It lived inside the house, under the same roof, separated from the family by a single wall. When the rice planting was done and the animal had nothing left to carry, the family dressed it — not in a saddle, but in armor, bells, ribbons, and silk. They walked it to the shrine of the horse god and said thank you. An anonymous woodcarver took this procession and carved it into a single standing figure: a white horse in full ceremonial dress, wearing more decoration than the people who walk beside it. It does not move. It does not need to. The bells do the talking.

【 The Function 】

A standing figure. Twenty-six centimeters tall, carved from light timber in an interlocking construction — body, neck, and legs shaped separately, then fitted together. The horse wears a layered textile coat in orange with a woven cross-hatch pattern, tied at the belly. Ribbons in red, blue, green, and purple hang from the sides. Small brass bells are knotted to the harness with twisted cord. Shake the figure gently and the bells sound — a faint, dry chime that the Japanese government listed among the hundred sounds worth preserving.

【 The Texture 】

Carved timber sealed with gesso and painted in flat, opaque color. The body is white — clean, chalky, and matte. The hooves are sky blue. The ears are lined in red. A gold medallion sits on the forehead. The mane and tail are natural plant fiber, pale blonde, cut blunt and left to fall. The textile coat is real cloth — not painted on — with a printed pattern stitched and glued to the wooden body. The bells are real metal, small enough to fit on a fingertip, strung on red-and-white twisted cord. Every surface is a different material: wood, cloth, fiber, metal. The hand moves from smooth to rough to soft to cold in a single pass.

【 Presence 】

It is the tallest and most decorated object in any room it enters. The white body and orange coat make it impossible to ignore. The ribbons hang still until someone walks past, and then they move. The bells stay silent until someone picks it up, and then they ring. It stands the way the real horse stands at the shrine — still, patient, and covered in more gratitude than it knows what to do with.

Sourced from a private collection in northern Japan.

SERPENT PURSE 1962
$185.00

【 The Concept 】

In Japanese folk belief, the white snake is the one animal that carries money toward you instead of away. Not because it is greedy — because it serves the deity of wealth, and the deity trusts it to choose who receives what. An anonymous ceramicist took this belief and built it into a clay bell: a white snake coiled on top of an orange drawstring purse, clutching a gold coin marked with the character for its own zodiac year. The purse is full. The snake is not leaving. The coin is not for spending. It is for keeping — because in this tradition, money shown to a white snake stays.

【 The Function 】

A clay bell and a fortune vessel. Shake it and a small clay sphere sealed inside the body strikes the walls and produces a dry, earthen rattle. Set it down and the snake watches the room from the top of its purse. In the tradition it comes from, this object is placed near the entrance of a home or beside a cash register — wherever money enters. The purse holds what comes in. The snake guards what stays. The coin declares the terms.

【 The Texture 】

Fired clay sealed with gofun and painted with mineral pigment bound in nikawa. The purse body is a warm orange — somewhere between persimmon and vermillion — with a blue band tied around the waist and small yellow flowers scattered across the surface. The snake is matte white, coiled once around the top of the purse, its body smooth and unscaled. Its eyes are red dots. Its mouth is a thin red line. The gold coin it holds is painted in flat yellow with the zodiac character brushed in black. The back of the bell carries a narrow slit where the sound escapes. The surface is chalky and dry to the touch — no gloss, no varnish, no modern coating.

【 Presence 】

It fits inside a closed hand. The orange is the loudest color in any room it enters. The white snake is the quietest thing on top of it. That contrast is the design — something bright enough to attract attention, guarded by something still enough to keep it. Place it where the money comes in. The snake will handle the rest.

Sourced from a private collection in western Japan.