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"This statue
is but one of the hundreds of curiosities, souvenirs, relics
and oddities gathered from all parts of the world and on
exhibition at The House of Novelties and Curios, E. Bolch
Mercantile Company, 70 Market Street - San Francisco,
Cal."
It has been told
this statue was the prized possession of Robert Ripley, of
"Ripley's Believe It Or Not". As mentioned in Ripley's
Amazing Facts: "Ripley's prized possession was a sculpture
of Japanese artist Hananuma Masakichi. The life-size,
life-like, self-sculpted statue incorporated Masakichi's own
hair, fingernails and toenails to make it appear more real.
Ripley kept the
statue in a special curtained area of his bedroom".
The statue was exhibited at the Ripley's Believe It Or Not
Odditorium at the 1935 California Pacific International
Exposition and at the Ripley dime museum.
The story goes;
Hananuma Masakichi was a Japanese artist who learned he was
dying from tuberculosis, and wanted to leave a gift to the
woman he loved. He made a statue of
himself that is so life-like and realistic, people couldn't
tell which was the fake even while the real Masakichi stood
next to it. Working with adjustable mirrors, Masakichi made
each body part separately using strips of dark wood, between
2,000 and 5,000 pieces. The statue is mostly hollow inside.
No nails were used; the strips were assembled using dovetail
joints, glue and wooden pegs. They are joined so perfectly
that no seams can be seen, even with a magnifying glass. The
wood was painted and lacquered to match his skin tone and
reflects every tendon, muscle, bone, vein and wrinkle and
pore.

Masakichi also handcrafted glass eyes that are so
technically and visually perfect that they still baffle
members of the optical profession. The artist then bored a
tiny, individual hole for every pore on his body and plucked
the corresponding hair from that pore and inserted it at the
exact position on the statue. In this manner he covered the
entire sculpture with all of his own hair - head, beard,
backs of his hands, legs, eyebrows and eyelashes. Then he
pulled out all of his own fingernails, toe nails and teeth
and carefully put them in their exact position on the
statue. He finished off the statue by adding his glasses,
clothes, a sculpting tool and a tiny mask he had made. The
figure appears emaciated because the TB was taking it's
toll. He was 53 when the statue was finished in 1885.
Masakichi held a private exhibition of his work. He stood
beside the artwork to the utter confusion and awe of the
audience who could not tell which was him and which was not.
Hananuma managed
to live to age 63 and died in 1895. In spite of his
incredible talent, he died in poverty. Ripley's Believe It
Or ot was an agglomeration of facts collected from his
travels to over 198 countries, a way of documenting and
sharing his odd and extraordinary cultural findings. This
included his most prized possession; a sculpture of Japanese
artist Hananuma Masakichi. Which, given the trade cards,
Robert Ripley evidently bought the statue around the corner
at E. H Bloch House of Novelties and Curios on Market Street
in San Francisco. |