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Overview·Kantei·Designations·Provenance·Blade Forms·Signatures·School
OverviewKanteiDesignationsProvenanceBlade FormsSignaturesSchool
  1. Schools
  2. Tegai
  3. Ko-Tegai
  4. Kanetoshi

Tegai Kanetoshi

包俊

Jūyō
Vol. 53, No. 32 · Tantō

Tegai Kanetoshi

包俊

4 ranked works

ProvinceYamatoEraKowa (1381–1384)PeriodNanbokuchōSchoolTegaiTraditionYamato-denTypeSwordsmithCodeKAN379
4Jūyō Tōken

Overview

A with a relief carved within a recessed panel on its front and on its back was transmitted in the Sendai Date family and is recorded in the ' Hiroku, the secret register of swords and spears, and it is the most fully documented of the four signed blades that carry Kanetoshi's two-character name. Kanetoshi was a swordsmith of the Yamato school, a group the published sources regard as a body of forgers attached to Tōdai-ji and the largest in scale of the five Yamato traditions. Its founder is given as Kanenaga, whose activity is placed around the Shōō era of the late period, and from him the school flourished through the age and on into the . In the reference compendia the Kanetoshi name is first cited around the Kōan era as an early signature of the first-generation Kanenaga, and is then seen inherited as a successive title down through the and periods. The surviving signed pieces are all small , read as no later than the Ōei era of the early , and the published sources judge the better of them to express Kanetoshi's own character well.

His is a Yamato hand whose grain inclines toward . The forging is , often a tightly packed , that flows and tends toward , with fine thickly and evenly applied; toward the a faint, whitish stands across the , the reflection that the judges name as the very feature setting this later work apart from the -period Yamato blades. Over that he tempers a , calm and shallow, that is never left plain. frays the , small enter, adhere, and runs delicately through, the kept bright and clear with a faintly subdued tendency that the published sources single out as a point of interest, naming it among the school's marks when they write of its 「沈みごころの匂口など手掻派の見どころ」. The runs straight to a with a somewhat long return, at times brushing into at the tip. The form holds to a standard with , the a little thick and the curvature an inward .

The is the more telling half. On the 62 the is densely packed with extremely fine thickly applied and fine entering, the steel bright in color and well worked, while toward the the whitish stands and near the edge the reads straight; the published sources call this a forging in which both and manifest the typical style of the Ōei era, 「地刃に応永頃の手掻派の典型的作風を現わしている」. The faint here is not the deliberate reflection of steel but the natural cast of a Yamato forged in flowing, -inclined grain, and it carries across the smaller pieces as a whitish tone rather than a clear band. Against this the keeps its discipline yet the activity never lets it settle: on the 11 the wide appears shallowly wet with and , and on the 53 piece the temper becomes -like from around the , with small entering the lower half and the bright and clear, the judges finding in it Kanetoshi's character well shown and the workmanship good, 「包俊の特色をよくあらわして、出来がよい」.

The four divide into two registers of one Ōei manner. Across all of them the spine is the fine over -inclined , the whitish , the and the that the school is read by. Two of the blades carry more in the temper than the calm allows. The 53 takes a tendency at the and carries a shōbu- with a plain in its carving, while the 62 piece tempers from the with a , then takes into the -toned line with scattered along the and a that runs , slightly angular on one face and tending to a pointed tip on the other, and bears the relief on its front. The judges note that signed examples of Kanetoshi are few, 「有銘は少い」, and that smiths of the name from the mid- onward tend to a more -dominant temper with standing out in the , so that the calm, bright of these Ōei pieces marks the better, earlier reach of the name.

What places him is best taken from his own blades. The 10 commentary reads these as Yamashiro-style copies, a Yamashiro-mono , that differ from -period examples in their slightly extended dimensions, their whitish , the intermixed here and there, and a return somewhat lacking in refinement, the four points by which a Ōei is told from an older Yamato one. His -inclined with its whitish , his laced with and the occasional , and his with its long return are the marks of his hand drawn from his own blades, and they set his work within the descent without recourse to a borrowed comparison. The published sources weigh him against the standard of his own school rather than against another, finding that among works of this period executed to such a level are rare, 「手搔物で、これだけ出来の優れたこの時代の短刀は稀である」, and valuing the soundest of them as reference material for the study of workmanship, 「手搔物研究上の好参考品である」.

Kanetoshi is held entirely in the tier rather than in the higher designations: the record carries four and no National Treasures or Important Cultural Properties, his designation factor mid-range among names. All four are and signed in the two-character hand, which for so thinly recorded a smith is itself the value, since the published sources note how few signed examples survive. Of the 62 , the Sendai Date heirloom recorded in the ' Hiroku, the judges write that both and are exceedingly sound and the carvings on both faces splendid, 「地刃共に頗る健全で、表裏の彫物も見事である」, and they call the 11 piece 「健全で出来がよい」. No other provenance and no current institutional holder attaches to the recorded blades, so the honest picture is of a smith preserved in private and designated hands rather than in the great museum collections. For a collector this means a signed Kanetoshi is among the rarer of the old Yamato to encounter, the four designated pieces coming to light only from time to time and with patience, each prized less for scale than as a reference point for the Ōei reach of one of the largest Yamato schools.

Kantei

one Oei Tegai manner in tanto, read in two registers: a fine suguha with whitish utsuri and the Yamato hataraki across all four, and the more worked pieces where ko-gunome enters the temper and the boshi runs midare-komi

Kanetoshi is a -school smith of Yamato, the group the published sources describe as a body of forgers attached to Todai- and the largest in scale of the five Yamato schools, taking Kanenaga of the late period as its founder. In the reference compendia the Kanetoshi name is first cited around the Koan era as an early signature of the first-generation Kanenaga, and was then inherited across the and periods; the surviving signed blades are read as no later than the Oei era of the early . On the blades themselves he is an Oei Tegai hand working in : over a of and tight inclining to and , with fine thickly applied and a faint whitish standing toward the , he tempers a -based laced with , , and , the bright and clear, the a with a somewhat long return. The published sources call the better of these the typical workmanship of the Oei period, well expressing Kanetoshi's own character; the 53 carries a tendency at the , and the 62 , a Sendai Date heirloom recorded in the ' Hiroku, mixes into the with a .

Diagnostic discriminators

75% of his works

75% of his works

50% of his works

25% of his works

Observation by phase

Oei Tegai prime: a fine suguha over masame-inclined itame, whitish utsuri, hotsure and a komaru boshi

Across his signed the published sources read the standard Yamato manner of the group around the Oei era. The forging is , often a tight , inclining to and a tendency, with attaching finely and well and, toward the , a faint whitish or that the commentary names as a point distinguishing this later work from -period examples. Over it he tempers a or fine , calm and shallow, laced with the Yamato activity the school is known for: along the , small entering, adhering, running through, the bright and clear with a somewhat subdued tendency the published sources single out as a point of interest. The runs straight to a , the return somewhat long, at times with at the tip. The form is a standard with and , the slightly thick. The commentary calls these works ones in which Kanetoshi's character is well expressed and the workmanship sound, valuing them as reference material for the study of .

Sugata 姿
Jigane 地鉄
Hamon 刃文
Bōshi 帽子

The more worked pieces: ko-gunome in the temper, nijuba and chikei, a midare-komi boshi

the carved tanto: the ko-gunome-mixed temper, nijuba and midare-komi boshi sit on the two pieces that also carry horimono (the kuichigai shobu-hi and suken of Juyo 53, the kurikara of Juyo 62), distinct from the plain calm suguha of the others

Two of the carry more activity than the calm allows. On the 53 piece the forging is a tightly packed mixed with flowing grain and fine , the whitish faint but present, and from around the the temper becomes -like, small entering in the lower half with slight , the bright and clear. On the 62 the is dense with extremely fine thickly applied and fine entering; there is a from the , above which the -toned temper takes in , the shows scattered , and the runs , slightly angular on the and tending to a pointed tip on the . These pieces also carry : shobu- with a on the 53 , and a relief within a recessed panel with on the 62. The published sources read both as clearly manifesting the typical style of the Oei period in and alike.

Sugata 姿
Jigane 地鉄
Hamon 刃文
Bōshi 帽子
Scholarship

The published sources place the Tegai group as a body of smiths attached to Todai-ji and call it the largest in scale of the five Yamato schools, with Kanenaga of the late Kamakura period as founder.

The Juyo 10 commentary reads these tanto as Yamashiro-style copies (Yamashiro-mono utsushi) that differ from Kamakura-period examples in their slightly extended dimensions, their whitish jigane, the gunome intermixed here and there, and a boshi return somewhat lacking in refinement.

Designations

Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin—
Gyobutsu—
Tokubetsu Jūyō—
Jūyō Tōken4

Elite Standing

0.02 across 4 designated works

Top 28% among smiths

Provenance

1 documented provenance across certified works by Kanetoshi

Provenance Standing

1 works held in elite collections across 1 documented provenances

Top 84% among smiths

Raw score: 1.83 / 10

Blade Forms

Distribution across 4 ranked works

Signatures

Signature types across 4 ranked works

Currently Available

Tegai School

Other artisans of the Tegai school

  1. 1.Kanenaga包永1 for sale67designated
  2. 2.Kanekiyo包清8designated
  3. 3.Kanenaga包永5designated
  4. 4.Kanetsugu包次4designated
  5. 5.Kanezane包眞3designated
  6. 6.Kanekiyo包清2 for sale3designated
  7. 7.Kanetsugu包次1designated
  8. 8.Kanetoshi包利1designated
  9. 9.Kanekiyo包清1designated
  10. 10.Kaneyoshi包吉2designated
  11. 11.Kanekuni包國3 for sale2designated
  12. 12.Kanetoshi包利2designated