Unknown Artist
A number of the original Sosaku Kokeshi artists were part of the craftsmen and broke away from the families that created Traditional Kokeshi and began by introducing historical and folklore subjects in creating their newly found style. “All categories of Japanese Artifacts shown in this category represent tangible incarnations of social relationships embodying the attitudes and behaviors of the past.” Many of these objects were one-offs and represented social practices, high-ranking members of society including nobility, the daimyō, which were high-ranking members of the samurai, shōgun, ronin, and cultural norms, local and regional practices, and other valuable historical data related to objects such as religious figures Daruma (Bodhidharma), and the upper-class subjects including merchants, and craftsmen for the nobility. All of these art objects (kokeshi and Folk Art) represented provenances throughout Japan that celebrated the values of those citizens. Related to Kokeshi, Sosaku carvers moved onto more diverse images and motifs that represented various aspects of everyday traditions and customs of all ages and regions to satisfy the appetite of travelers and those sight-seeing throughout Japan. For this reason, we see several unknown craftspersons that may have produced only one object, which may or may not be signed, or not always recognized, as many times not translatable into other languages.