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Overview·Designations·Provenance·Blade Forms·Signatures·School
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  4. Motoyuki

Motoshige Motoyuki

本行

Jūyō
Vol. 53, No. 96 · Tachi

Motoshige Motoyuki

本行

3 ranked works

ProvinceHizenEraTenna (1681–1684)PeriodEdoSchoolOsafune>MotoshigeTraditionBizen-denGeneration1stFujishiroChu-jo sakuToko Taikan250(top 76%)TypeSwordsmithCodeMOT177
1Tokubetsu Jūyō2Jūyō Tōken

Overview

Kawachi no Kami Minamoto Motoyuki (本行), commonly known as Matsuba Motoyuki, was a swordsmith of Karatsu in Province active during the mid- period. His era of activity is recorded as Tenna (1681--1684), and reference works list him as the first generation bearing this name. Motoyuki worked within the broader tradition of swordsmithing, a lineage celebrated for its refined forging and disciplined temperlines. He received the court title Kawachi no Kami and signed with the full " no Karatsu-jū Kawachi no Kami Minamoto Motoyuki ." He is rated chū-jō (above average) by Fujishiro and carries a Hawley rating of 55.

Motoyuki's workmanship is characterized by a tightly forged with fine , producing a steel of notably clear kana-iro tone. His typically begins with a -based before developing into a wide, gentle mixed with , exhibiting deep with and a bright, clear . His blades tend toward wide with shallow and an elongated , reflecting the robust proportions favored in the Genroku era. The is rendered with a rounded turnback, and the is characteristically finished with filemarks and a long signature placed near the side.

Motoyuki's finest surviving work -- a dated Genroku 11 (1698) -- is described in the designation records as his greatest masterwork, with both and praised as bright and clear and the overall state of preservation deemed exceptionally . This blade was mounted with fittings by Tsuchiya Yasuchika, one of the celebrated Nara sansaku, in a commission for the Matsudaira Daigaku no Kami Yoritsada. The pairing of Motoyuki's blade with Yasuchika's metalwork in a unified mounting testifies to the esteem in which his work was held among discerning patrons of the period.

Designations

Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin—
Gyobutsu—
Tokubetsu Jūyō1
Jūyō Tōken2

Elite Standing

0.00 across 3 designated works

Top 100% among smiths

Provenance

1 documented provenance across certified works by Motoyuki

Provenance Standing

0 works held in elite collections across 1 documented provenances

Top 47% among smiths

Raw score: 2.00 / 10

Blade Forms

Distribution across 3 ranked works

Signatures

Signature types across 3 ranked works

Currently Available

Motoshige School

Other artisans of the Motoshige school

  1. 1.Motoshige元重4 for sale159designated
  2. 2.Motoshige元重1designated