

Last week, when all eyes were on the $2.2 billion marquee sales in New York, Sotheby’s achieved another historic result in Hong Kong with the white-glove sale of masterpieces from Japan’s Okada Museum of Art, which generated HK$688 million ($88 million) across 125 works. Staged as a single-owner sale during the Asian Art sales series, the auction saw 19 lots surpass the $10 million mark. Topping the sale was Kitagawa Utamaro’s monumental panoramic ukiyo-e masterpiece Fukagawa in Snow (Fukagawa no yuki), which achieved HK$55,275,000 ($7,101,179) over an HK$8,000,000 high estimate, selling to a Japanese collector after a lengthy eight-minute bidding battle with more than 30 bids. The composition unfolds as a full dioramic panorama, capturing the atmosphere of a grand Fukagawa teahouse in winter: the upper floor bustling with movement and activity, animated by customs and rituals specific to the Fukagawa licensed quarters. Through the fukinuki-yatai “blown-off roof” convention, Utamaro reveals geisha, attendants and visitors engaged in music, games and daily rituals, framed by snow-laden pines. Rich pigments, intricate details and twenty-seven figures animate this three-meter-wide scene that is unprecedented in scale within his oeuvre.
Born around 1753, Utamaro trained under the Kano-school painter Toriyama Sekien (1712-1788), becoming renowned for his bijin-ga, or portraits of beautiful women—especially in the okubi-e style, characterized by large-headed bust portraits. Female figures sit at the very center of this monumental print, whose vibrant storytelling encapsulates all the elements that made Utamaro one of the most celebrated ukiyo-e artists of the Edo period. Today, the work stands as an extraordinary testament to his virtuosity and the cultural world of the licensed pleasure quarters.
The other top lot of the session was Katsushika Hokusai’s iconic Under the Wave off Kanagawa (Kanagawa-oki nami-ura), widely known as The Great Wave, which fetched HK$21,725,000—far exceeding its HK$8,000,000 high estimate. Approximately 8,000 impressions were produced of the work, though only about 130 prints survive. Comparable examples can be found in the collections of the British Museum, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. This edition sold to a Japanese collector for more than three times its estimate after a fierce eight-minute bidding battle, with over 20 bids placed in the room, via Sotheby’s specialists on the phone and online.
There was also heated competition for three other iconic prints from Hokusai’s Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, each of which surpassed its high estimate. Another masterpiece of Hokusai’s beauty portraiture, A Summer Morning (Natsu no asa), soared to HK$20,505,000 ($2,634,277), pushed by 22 bids to nearly triple its HK$7,000,000 high estimate. Similarly intense bidding—with 42 bids—ratcheted up the price of Ito Jakuchu’s (1716-1800) poetic Cockerel among Flowers to six times its estimate, with the work ultimately selling for HK$9,525,000 ($1,223,677).
Advisory Gurr Johns managed the museum liquidation
Global art advisory and appraisal firm Gurr Johns managed the entire deaccessioning process—from appraisal to sale, and all legal and tax requirements—over more than two years. The Okada Museum of Art in Hakone, Japan (founded in 2013 by billionaire collector Kazuo Okada), was compelled to sell this trove of masterworks to settle a roughly $50 million legal bill owed by Okada.
<img decoding="async" class="lazyload wp-image-1601976 size-full-width" src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==" data-src="https://observer.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2025/11/Screenshot-2025-11-24-at-12.41.27-PM.png?w=970" alt="A group of auctioneers and Sothebyâs staff stand in front of the rostrum during an auction session in Hong Kong." width="970" height="535" data-caption='The global art advisory firm Gurr Johns played a key role in steering the Okada Museum’s court-ordered consignment, overseeing valuation and strategy. <span class="lazyload media-credit">Photo: Charlie Horne</span>’>
“After meeting a litigator in Miami who asked me if we could appraise and help sell an Asian art museum collection, Gurr Johns was engaged to appraise the Okada Museum Collection on behalf of the corporate receivers in a Hong Kong bankruptcy case,” president Charlie Horne told Observer. “The collection, comprising masterworks of Asian art, required a comprehensive valuation to establish a foundation for both legal and commercial decision-making.” Following completion of the appraisal, Gurr Johns was awarded the highly competitive consignment mandate over leading international auction houses. “Our independence as an advisory firm, combined with our ability to tailor solutions across jurisdictions, proved decisive in moving this complex matter forward,” Horne added, explaining how, in close collaboration with New York and Hong Kong counsel, they developed a bespoke consignment structure. “Particular care was taken to address the legal requirements of a receivership sale while simultaneously preserving the value and integrity of the collection.”
Stellar results for Chinese and Korean Art
The Ya Yi fanglei vessel, dated to the late Shang dynasty, sold for HK$38,805,000 ($4,985,278), after more than 45 bids for nearly ten times its high estimate. A fine doucai gilt-decorated “bajixiang” tianqiuping vase from the Qianlong period squarely met expectations, achieving HK$33,925,000 ($4,358,345) after a HK$60,000,000 high estimate. A superb celadon-glazed lotus-mouth bottle vase of the Yongzheng period soared to HK$30,875,000 (US$3,966,511), nearly doubling its high estimate after 23 bids. Strong demand also propelled an extremely rare Tang dynasty sancai-glazed hawk-form ewer to HK$22,945,000 (approximately US$2,947,744)—eight times its high estimate, with 31 bids placed.


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