Three blades survive dated Keichō 11, third month, one each a , a and a , and they are the only dated works Ōsumi-jō Fujiwara Masahiro left behind. He was a native of Obi in who came up to the capital and entered the gate of Kunihiro, the smith who reshaped Kyoto forging at the opening of the age; the published sources record him variously as Kunihiro's nephew or as his pupil and leave the question open. By the time of those Keichō 11 pieces he had already received the title Ōsumi-jō, second in early dating within the school only to a Keichō 2 work of Awa-no-kami Zaikichi, so he stood among the seniors of the circle. Above all he is held to be the closest of all Kunihiro's pupils to the master, and is counted one of the smiths who forged in his stead. The Yakō Meishūshi appraises him in a single line, that he is said to have served as Kunihiro's deputy, and was extremely skilled ("Kunihiro ga dai o tsutomu to ieri, itatte jōzu nari").
His characteristic hand is the long of Keichō- shape: wide in body with little taper from base to tip, shallow in , with an extended chū-kissaki or a large kissaki, the build the published sources compare to a greatly shortened Nanbokuchōōdachi. Many are long and weighty, and the commentary remarks more than once on "a long and heavy build, weighty in the hand" (chōdai de zusshiri to temochi no omoi taihai)2 as something frequent in this smith even within the group. Over that shape he tempers the Sōshū tradition, but not in the showy manner usual to the Horikawa school. His is a calm hand. The body of the temper is a suguha-toned base or a ko-notare into which gunome, ko-gunome, angular and slightly pointed elements gather, with ashi entering, ko-nie adhering and at times thickening unevenly into coarse nie, sunagashi running and kinsuji entering, and the nioiguchi sunk in character. The published sources say of him plainly that "one does not see the large midare" (ō-midare no mono wa minai)3, and it is that restraint, more than any flamboyant copy, that identifies him.
The jigane is the constant beneath both his quieter and his more active blades. It is an itame that stands up, dry and coarse in the zanguri texture typical of Horikawa work, with thick ji-nie and chikei entering. What sets his jigane apart within that shared school texture is the mokume: it is mixed in with marked prominence, and the commentary singles out the conspicuous mokume as a distinctive trait of this smith. On several blades a mizukage rises from the machi, a feature transmitted from his teacher. The bōshi enters in a midare-komi and turns in ko-maru with hakikake, and where the temper is calmest it runs in a near-straight suguha manner that rounds off gently.
Across his small body of work the published sources read two registers of one hand. The frequent one is this restrained Sōshū copy, looking to the superior Sōshū masters and to Shizu above all, and on one wakizashi, with its devotional bonji, suken and gomabashi carving, to Sadamune; the commentary calls his best katana "superior works among this smith's production" (dōsaku-chū no yūhin), forged in "the Horikawa manner that emulates the high-ranking Sōshū masters" (Sōshū jōkō ni naratta Horikawa-mono no sakufū)4. The other register is the one the daisaku tradition rests upon: where the nioiguchi sinks, the nie thickens and gathers unevenly, and the temper is run down below the machi in the yakikomi the sources name as Kunihiro's own habit at the start of the temper. One Tokubetsu-Jūyōkatana of this quieter kind is read as so close to the master that it speaks directly to Kunihiro's range. His dates, for reasons the sources cannot explain, are confined to Keichō 11, and after Kunihiro's death in Keichō 19 he is thought to have returned home to Hyūga, where he signed "Nisshū-jū", "Nisshū Obi-jū" and "Hyūga-no-kuni-jū".
What distinguishes Masahiro within the Horikawa group is exactly this quietness. The general Horikawa manner copies the high Sōshū masters in a lively, flamboyant midare; his does not. He keeps the temper low and the line subdued, so that the teacher's flamboyant idiom is comparatively faint in his work, while the deeper marks of the master remain. His own bright distinctions are the conspicuous mokume in the zangurijigane, the sunken nioiguchi, the yakikomi below the machi and the mizukage at the machi. The published sources go further still: his working manner, the form of his signature, his file marks and his tang construction are all the closest to Kunihiro of anyone in the school, and even the two characters "Fujiwara" in his signature are entirely like the master's. He is the deputy hand of the Horikawa, the same Sōshū-den worked at lower temperature.
For the collector he is a scarce name, and an instructive one. Fujishiro grades him Jō-jō saku. He has no National Treasures; his record runs through one Important Cultural Property, three katana at Tokubetsu-Jūyō and ten works at Jūyō, fourteen designated works on record in all. Because his blades are mostly long and were mostly shortened, an ubu signed katana is rare, and the published sources prize such pieces especially, counting the finest "superior works that show no breakdown despite their great length." His extant output is genuinely small, and the recorded whereabouts of his blades are private rather than institutional, so a signed Ōsumi-jō Masahiro comes to light only seldom. When one does, it carries two things at once, a fine Keichō-shintō sword in its own right, and the nearest surviving window onto Horikawa Kunihiro's own hand, which is what a privately held example is worth to a collector.
Kantei
one Horikawa Sōshū-den hand read across two registers: the calm restrained register that defines him, a suguha-toned ko-notare with gathering gunome over a mokume-rich zanguri itame, and within it the Kunihiro-echo register where the sunken nioiguchi, the yakikomi below the machi and the mizukage make him pass for the master, set against his scarce dated and naginata/tanto work
Ōsumi-jō Fujiwara Masahiro is a Keichō-shintō Kyoto smith, a native of Obi in Hyūga who came up to the capital and entered Horikawa Kunihiro's gate, recorded variously as Kunihiro's nephew or his pupil. He is held to be the closest of all the Horikawa circle to the master, and the published sources reckon him one of Kunihiro's daisaku makers, the Yakō Meishūshi appraising him as one who served in Kunihiro's stead and was supremely skilled. His extant work is very scarce. He had already received the title Ōsumi-jō by Keichō 11, the date borne by his only dated pieces, so he ranked among the seniors of the school. His characteristic hand is a long, wide, shallow-sorikatana with an extended chū-kissaki, the Keichō-shintō shape that evokes a greatly shortened Nanbokuchōōdachi, many of them long and heavy in the hand. Over a standing itame mixed conspicuously with mokume, dry and coarse in the zanguriHorikawa texture, with thick ji-nie and chikei, he tempers not the flamboyant Sōshū copy usual to the school but a calmer line: a suguha-toned base or ko-notare into which gunome and ko-gunome gather, with ashi, ko-nie, sunagashi and kinsuji, the nioiguchi sunk in character, the temper run down below the machi, the boshi a midare-komi that turns in ko-maru with hakikake. He looks to the superior Sōshū masters, Shizu above all and Sadamune on his wakizashi, yet the sunken nioiguchi, the yakikomi below the machi, the mizukage at the machi and the very form of his Fujiwara signature all communicate directly with Kunihiro. He is the quietest hand of the Horikawa group, the master's deputy worked at lower temperature.
Diagnostic discriminators
穏やかな相(直刃調・小のたれに互の目、大乱れを見ず)odayaka na saku3
匂口沈みごころ・区下の焼込み(国広の徴)shizumi nioiguchi, yakikomi4
杢の目立つザングリの板目mokume-rich zanguri itame3
Observation by phase
The restrained Sōshū hand (his recognized type)
His characteristic and most frequent work is a long katana of Keichō-shintō shape, wide in body with little taper, shallow in sori, with an extended chū-kissaki or large kissaki, a build the published sources liken to a greatly shortened Nanbokuchōōdachi, often long and heavy in the hand. The ground is an itame that stands up, mixed conspicuously with mokume, dry and coarse in the zanguri texture typical of Horikawa work, with thick ji-nie and chikei entering, the marked mokume singled out as his own trait. Over it he tempers the Sōshū-den, but not in the flamboyant manner usual to the school: a suguha-toned base or ko-notare into which gunome, ko-gunome, angular and slightly pointed elements gather, with ashi, ko-nie that at times thickens unevenly and coarsens, sunagashi running and kinsuji entering, the nioiguchi sunk in character. The published sources say of him that he does not make the large midare, his hand comparatively calm. The boshi enters in a midare-komi and turns in ko-maru with hakikake. He looks to the superior Sōshū masters, Shizu above all, and on one wakizashi to Sadamune; he carves bonji, suken and gomabashi on his tanto and wakizashi, and bo-hi on the katana. This restrained register, more than any showy copy, is the point of recognition for Masahiro.
The Kunihiro echo (where he passes for the master)
Within that same restrained hand the published sources read the marks that make Masahiro pass for Kunihiro, and on which the daisaku tradition rests. The nioiguchi sinks in character, the nie thickens and gathers unevenly, and the temper is run down below the machi in a yakikomi that the sources name as Kunihiro's habit at the start of the temper. A mizukage rises at the machi on several blades, transmitted from the master. The forging is the coarse standing zanguriitame of Horikawa work, here with the mokume especially conspicuous. The published sources hold that his working manner, his signature, his file marks and his tang construction are all the closest to Kunihiro of anyone in the school, so that the Fujiwara characters of his signature are entirely like the master's. It is this register, calm and Kunihiro-toned, more than any flamboyant Sōshū copy, that the sources point to in calling him one of Kunihiro's substitute makers.
Jigane 地鉄
板目itame3杢moku3ザングリzanguri3
Hamon 刃文
匂口沈みshizumi-gokoro3荒沸ara-nie1湯走りyubashiri3
Bōshi 帽子
掃きかけhakikake3
Scholarship
The published sources tie Masahiro closely to Kunihiro as a daisaku maker: his working manner, the form of his signature, his file marks and his tang construction are all the closest to Kunihiro of anyone in the school, and even the Fujiwara characters of his signature are entirely like the master's. The Yakō Meishūshi appraises him as one who served in Kunihiro's stead and was supremely skilled. The features that confirm it are the sunken nioiguchi, the unevenly thickened nie and the temper run down below the machi, all of which communicate directly with Kunihiro's range.2
On his standing in the school the published sources are clear: he had already received the Ōsumi-jō title by Keichō 11, the date borne by his only dated works, three pieces dated Keichō 11, third month, an auspicious day, one each katana, wakizashi and tantō, whose mature workmanship places him among the seniors of the Horikawa circle, second in early dating only to Awa-no-kami Zaikichi of Keichō 2.2
Dated Works
Years he was demonstrably active, proven by signed-and-dated blades
Active period
1606Editorial estimate: 1596–1615
1 of 13 designated works carry a date
1606
慶長十一年Juyo session 24, item 361
Historical importance
Where Masahiro 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.