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Overview·Designations·Provenance·Work Types·Signatures·Lineage·School
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  1. Schools
  2. Nara
  3. Joi

Nara Joi

乗意

Tokujū
Vol. 23, No. 42 · Kozuka

Nara Joi

乗意

12 ranked works

ProvinceEdoEraGenroku-Horeki (1701–1761)SchoolNaraTraditionMachiboriTeacherToshinagaSpecialtiesfuchi-kashira, kozukaTypeTosogu MakerCodeNAR002
6Jūyō Bijutsuhin
1Tokubetsu Jūyō5Jūyō Tōken

Overview

Sugiura Joi (1701-1761), known by the art name Issando, trained under Juei in the lineage of Nara Toshiharu and rose to become one of the celebrated "Three Masters of Nara" (Nara sansaku) alongside Toshihisa and Yasuchika. Born in Genroku 14, he also used the names Sen'emon and Eishun throughout his career. His place within this triumvirate secured his lasting reputation as one of the foremost independent metalworkers of the mid- period, working outside the patronage structures that governed the Goto house.

Joi is most closely identified with nikuaibori, a modulated relief-carving technique he developed into a personal specialty of unrivaled refinement. Through subtle variations in height and volume, he coaxed remarkably expressive surfaces from bare metal grounds, often completing entire compositions through chisel work alone, dispensing with (inlay) and (colored metal accents). His preferred format was the , where nikuaibori found its fullest expression on polished grounds. He also employed (fine line engraving) for textures such as fur and flowing water, and incisive for sharp geological forms. When he did turn to inlaid techniques, as in his sets on brass or plain copper () grounds, his (high relief) and displayed equal mastery, with precisely modulated gold and inlay enhancing the sculptural depth.

Joi's are recognized as extremely rare, making any authenticated example a significant survival. His most celebrated subject, the lion casting its cub into Chigiri Valley, exists in closely related versions across multiple designations and is published in the canonical reference no Hana. Whether rendering the anxious gaze of a parent lion or the lively expressions of Chinese boys at play, Joi's work is distinguished by its immediacy and the sheer expressive authority of his chisel.

Designations

Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin6
Gyobutsu—
Tokubetsu Jūyō1
Jūyō Tōken5

Elite Standing

0.49 across 12 designated works

Top 2% among makers

Provenance

6 documented provenances across certified works by Joi

Provenance Standing

0 works held in elite collections across 6 documented provenances

Top 51% among makers

Raw score: 1.99 / 10

Work Types

Distribution across 12 ranked works

Tsuba
350%
Fuchi-Kashira
233%
Kozuka
117%

Signatures

Signature types across 12 ranked works

Currently Available

Lineage

TeacherToshinaga
Joi

Nara School

Other artisans of the Nara school

  1. 1.Yasuchika安親1 for sale88designated
  2. 2.Toshinaga利寿28designated
  3. 3.Toshinaga利永1designated
  4. 4.Tou東雨1designated
  5. 5.Nara奈良1 for sale2designated
  6. 6.Minzan谺珉山1designated
  7. 7.Masahiro政弘1designated