Izumi no Kami Kunisada signed himself, on a sword dated the eighth month of Genna 7, "Sesshu Osaka-ju Fujiwara Kunisada," and that one inscription fixes both the man and the moment: a -trained smith already settled in Osaka, at the founding of what would become the city's own tradition of swordmaking. Collectors call him Oya Kunisada, "Kunisada the Elder," and the published sources are explicit that the name exists to separate him from his heir, written that he is so called "to distinguish him from his adopted son, Inoue Izumi no Kami Kunisada", the man later known as Inoue Shinkai. He was born in , went up to Kyoto, and is said to have entered the school of Kunihiro; but Kunihiro died in Keicho 19 when Kunisada was only twenty-five, and the judges read his early style and signatures as in fact following his senior fellow-disciple, Echigo no Kami Kunitomo. He moved to Osaka with Kawachi no Kami Kunisuke, received the title Izumi no Kami in Genna 9, took the tonsure in old age under the name Dowa, and died in Keian 5 at the age of sixty-three, "one of the pioneers who opened the path for the Osaka smiths".
His recognized hand is a broad, imposing in the Keicho- taste, wide in body with little taper from base to tip, thick in , and carried out to an extended chu-kissaki or o-kissaki. The forging is itame, frequently mixed with mokume and tending to stand a little, hada-dachi, with thick ji-nie and chikei entering freely; where the grain opens, the published sources name it the loose, vigorous zanguri texture of the Horikawa school, the steel of his teacher carried into Osaka. This is the jigane his work is read on. Over that jigane he tempers a notare base into which he sets gunome, ko-gunome and choji, the line opening from a short straight yakidashi in the Edo manner, deep in nioi with ko-nie well adhered, sunagashi and kinsuji running through it, often with muneyaki and drifting tobiyaki. The boshi runs straight into a ko-maru or enters in midare with hakikake, turning back rather long or deep. On his finest blades he adds carving: a relief shin-no-kurikara dragon set within the groove, with a bonji and paired goma-bashi, work the judges call distinctive and superb and count among his tells.
The jigane is the steady base beneath the temper. Itame with thick ji-nie and frequent chikei appears across his oeuvre, sometimes standing into that rustic zanguri surface, sometimes drawing tight; the deep, bright nioiguchi and the ko-nie along the edge are constants, and the activity is carried in ashi and yo, in sunagashi and kinsuji, rather than in towering clove heads. Where one Tokubetsu Juyokatana of the 27th session widens and turns vigorous, the published sources find it "rather than resembling Kunitomo, his de-facto teacher, closer to the calm, unforced character of Kunihiro himself," naming the ko-maru-sagariboshi and the frequent muneyaki as the elder Kunisada's own marks. The nioiguchi at times deepens, at times falls subdued, and that deliberate variation in how the nie gathers is itself part of his manner.
Three registers run through the work. The first is this prime notare-gunomekatana over the bold Horikawajigane. The second is a Soshu-leaning manner that looks back through his masters: the published sources read one Juyokatana as a Shizu-style piece made in emulation of his teacher, the choji not conspicuous yet the whole vigorous, and call a wakizashi an emulation of Soshu Sadamune, written "modelled on the manner of Soshu Sadamune, and well made"3. The third is a quiet, bright suguha of his late years, of which the judges note "the first generation's suguha work, though skillful"4, survives in very few examples, and that such a blade "at a glance appears closer rather to that of the second-generation Shinkai"5. To these late years belong his cursive sosho signatures of the Dowa period, which the sources connect to his old age, when his second generation, Inoue Shinkai, is said to have served often as proxy in both forging and signing; whether a given cursive blade is the elder's own work or Shinkai's daimei, and whether such pieces should be read as a separate second-generation Shinkai Kunisada, remain matters the published record leaves open for further study.
What sets him apart is named in his own designation papers. Against the tightly packed ko-itame of the old Bizen and Yamashiro lines, his standing zangurijigane and his notare opening from a straight yakidashi are the Osaka-shinto signature, not a Bizenchoji; against his own son Shinkai's brighter, more refined steel, the elder's hand reads as the rougher, more vigorous root from which the Osaka tradition grew. The judges place him with Kawachi no Kami Kunisuke at the head of that movement, his de-facto teacher Kunitomo behind him and his master Kunihiro behind that, and his heir Shinkai carrying the name forward into its most celebrated generation.
For the collector he is a major Osaka-shinto name held within reach but never common. Fujishiro grades him Jo-jo saku. He has no National Treasures and no Important Cultural Properties; his record runs instead through the Juyo rank in number, with three Tokubetsu Juyo and several prewar Juyo Bijutsuhin, eighty-four blades standing in the Tokubetsu Juyo and Juyo tiers. The provenance that survives is distinguished: blades that passed through the Imperial Family, the Sanada house, and the Ito family of his native Hyuga, with one Juyo Bijutsuhin now held at the Sano Art Museum. The published sources reserve their highest words for his signed katana, calling one "a quintessential work of the first-generation Kunisada, especially deep and splendid in nioiguchi, an outstanding example among his works"6, and another, the Soshu-flavoured Tokubetsu Juyo, simply "a blade after the elder Kunisada's own heart"7. Most of these are held rather than traded, and only a handful of the Tokubetsu Juyo and Juyo blades change hands in any decade; a signed Oya Kunisada in good condition comes to a private collector from time to time, with patience, and is a substantial acquisition when it does, a document of the founding of Osaka steel.
Kantei
one Osaka Shinto hand read across three registers: the prime, vigorous notare-gunome katana in the bold Horikawa zanguri ground; a Shizu and Soshu Sadamune echo that follows his master Kunihiro and his de-facto teacher Kunitomo; and a few late works in a quiet bright suguha that approach his son Shinkai, carrying his late cursive Dowa signatures and the proxy-mei question
Izumi no Kami Kunisada, known to collectors as Oya Kunisada, “the elder Kunisada,” to set him apart from his adopted son Inoue Shinkai, was a late disciple of Horikawa Kunihiro born in Hyuga and one of the founders of the Osaka Shinto tradition. The published sources record that when Kunihiro died in Keicho 19 he was only twenty-five, so his early style and signatures in fact follow his senior Echigo no Kami Kunitomo; he moved to Osaka with Kawachi no Kami Kunisuke, received the Izumi no Kami title in Genna 9, took the tonsure as Dowa in old age, and died in Keian 5 at sixty-three. His recognized hand is a broad, thick-kasane Keicho-shintokatana with an extended chu- to o-kissaki, forged in itame, often somewhat hada-dachi, with thick ji-nie and chikei in the loose Horikawazanguri manner; over it he sets a notare base mixed with gunome, ko-gunome and choji, opening from a straight yakidashi, deep in nioi, well laid with ko-nie, with sunagashi, kinsuji, muneyaki and tobiyaki, the boshisugu to ko-maru with hakikake, and a relief shin-no-kurikara with bonji and goma-bashi carved on his finest blades. A quieter suguha manner survives in only a few late works, said to approach his son Shinkai, and his late cursive signatures are debated as proxy work by Shinkai.
Diagnostic discriminators
のたれnotare3
倶利迦羅kurikara3
unique vs his plain-carved blades (bo-hi only)
ザングリzanguri1
unique vs tightly packed Bizen / Yamashiro ko-itame
Observation by phase
Prime: the vigorous notare-gunome Osaka Shinto katana
His recognized prime is the broad katana, wide in mihaba with little base-to-tip taper, thick in kasane and extended in the kissaki, the imposing Keicho-shinto shape. The ground is itame, often mixed with mokume and tending to hada-dachi, the loose vigorous zanguri texture of the Horikawa school, with thick ji-nie and frequent chikei. Over it the temper is a notare base mixed with gunome, ko-gunome and choji, opening from a straight yakidashi, the nioiguchi deep with ko-nie well adhered, sunagashi and kinsuji running through, often with muneyaki and yubashiri-like tobiyaki. The boshi runs sugu to a ko-maru or midare-komi with hakikake, returning rather long or deep. On his best signed blades he carves a relief shin-no-kurikara within the groove with a bonji and goma-bashi, the carving the published sources call distinctive and superb. The sources call the finest of these a representative masterwork, deep and splendid in nioiguchi, outstanding among his oeuvre.
The Shizu and Soshu Sadamune echo (after Kunihiro and Kunitomo)
A second register departs from his usual look. Here the choji recedes and the temper turns toward a vigorous Soshu manner: the published sources call one Juyokatana a Shizu-style work in emulation of his master, the choji not conspicuous yet the whole vigorous, and another wakizashi an emulation of Soshu Sadamune. The ground stands more, ji-nie and chikei deepen, the nie strengthens and at times spills into the ji with sunagashi and kinsuji. The Tokubetsu Juyo of the 27th session is read in just this light: rather than resembling Kunitomo, his de-facto teacher, it shows a calm and unforced character closer to Kunihiro himself, with ko-maru-sagari boshi and frequent muneyaki named as the elder Kunisada's own tells.
Jigane 地鉄
肌立ちhada-tachi2地景chikei2
Hamon 刃文
互の目gunome3金筋kinsuji2砂流しsunagashi2
Bōshi 帽子
小丸ko-maru1
Late suguha and the cursive Dowa signatures
His late register is a quiet bright suguha and the cursive sosho signatures of his Dowa years. The published sources note that the first generation's suguha work, though skillful, survives in very few examples, and at a glance approaches the work of the second generation, Shinkai: a tightly forged ko-itame, ji-nie that is clear, a suguha base faintly waving toward urumi, the nioiguchi bright, ashi entering, the boshi turning in ko-maru. From the Shoho era his works carry cursive five-character signatures, which the sources connect to his old age, when he had taken the tonsure as Dowa and his second generation, Inoue Shinkai, is said to have served often as proxy in both forging and signing. The sources hold these cursive blades to be late work, sometimes called proxy-mei by Shinkai, and record that one account would make such pieces a separate second-generation Shinkai Kunisada, while reserving judgment; the identity of the proxy-inscriber, they add, remains a subject for further study.
Jigane 地鉄
小板目ko-itame2地沸ji-nie2
Hamon 刃文
直刃suguha1匂深nioi-fukashi1焼出しyakidashi2足ashi2
Bōshi 帽子
小丸ko-maru1
Scholarship
The published sources record that Kunisada is commonly called Oya Kunisada, the elder, to distinguish him from his adopted son Inoue Izumi no Kami Kunisada, later Inoue Shinkai; that although he is said to have entered Horikawa Kunihiro's school, his early style and signatures show his real teacher to have been the senior Echigo no Kami Kunitomo; and that he took the tonsure as Dowa and died in Keian 5 at sixty-three.2
On his late cursive blades the published sources hold these to be work of his old age under the name Dowa, sometimes called proxy signatures by his second generation Inoue Shinkai, and record that one account would even make such pieces a separate second-generation Shinkai Kunisada, while reserving judgment; the identity of the proxy-inscriber, they add, remains a subject requiring further study.2
Dated Works
Years he was demonstrably active, proven by signed-and-dated blades
Active period
1626–1646Editorial estimate: 1624–1646
4 of 87 designated works carry a date
16201650
1626
寛永三年Juyo session 13, item 155
1627
寛永四年Juyo session 32, item 78
1646
正保三年Juyo session 66, item 105
正保三年Tokubetsu Juyo session 6, item 51
Historical importance
Where Kunisada stands among comparable artisans: across all of nihontō, and within tradition, era, and period. The tiers (Foremost · Leading · Major · Notable) weigh official designations from the NBTHK and Japan's Agency for Cultural Affairs, together with historical honors of lasting repute such as the Sansaku and Meibutsu-chō.
随一
Foremost
Kan'ei
屈指
Leading
Shintō
有数
Major
All nihontō
著名
Notable
Select a lens to see how it's measured.
Designations
Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin3
Gyobutsu1
Tokubetsu Jūyō3
Jūyō Tōken81
Elite Standing
0.25 across 88 designated works
Top 9% among smiths
Provenance
6 documented provenances across certified works by Kunisada
▸Imperial1
Shogunal—
Premier Daimyō—
Major Daimyō—
▸Other Daimyō1
Zaibatsu—
▸Institutions1
▸Named Collectors3
Provenance Standing
1 works held in elite collections across 6 documented provenances