Japanese red-crowned cranes take flight against a ground of deep, burnished gold — rich and warm as aged lacquer, as Japanese gilded screens, as the ochre light of late afternoon in a room where beauty has been taken seriously. The background carries a textured, slightly uneven quality that prevents it from ever feeling flat or commercial: this is gold with history, gold with depth, gold that has been lived with.
Against this ground, the cranes are extraordinary. The white of their plumage takes on warmth from the gold beneath it; the black of their wingtips becomes sharper, more graphic, more deliberate. The red crown — tiny, precise, non-negotiable — anchors each bird with a point of pure colour that the eye returns to again and again.
Of all the versions in this collection, the gold is the most celebratory, the most opulent, the most unashamedly joyful. It brings to mind Klimt, Edo-period byōbu screens, the great decorative traditions of East and West at the moment they converge. Exceptional in dining rooms, living rooms, entrance halls and bedrooms where a sense of occasion, warmth and confident grandeur is exactly what is called for.