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Overview·Kantei·Catalogue·Designations·Work Types·Signatures·Lineage·School
OverviewKanteiCatalogueDesignationsWork TypesSignaturesLineageSchool
  1. Schools
  2. Mito
  3. Katsuhira

Mito Katsuhira

勝平

Jūyō
Vol. 57, No. 51 · Tsuba

Mito Katsuhira

勝平

12 ranked works

ProvinceHitachiEraBunka–Meiji (1804–1886)PeriodMeijiSchoolMitoTraditionMachiboriTypeTosogu MakerCodeHIT041
12Jūyō Tōken

Overview

Hagiya Katsuhira (萩谷勝平), art name Seiryōken (生涼軒), was born in Mito on the twentieth day of the tenth month of Bunka 1 (1804) as the second son of Terakado Yoshishige. He was adopted into the Hagiya family through Hagiya Jinbei of Kamikanemachi, and took the common name Yasuke. One early source suggests he first studied under his elder brother Katsufusa before entering formal apprenticeship with Shinozaki Katsushige, a direct-line successor within the Mito kinkō tradition. From Tenpō 15 (1844) he served the domain as an officially appointed metal-carver (goyō horimonoshi), and was active as a leading figure among the Mito metalworkers through the final years of the shogunate and into the Meiji era. He trained many pupils, bestowing the character "Ya" (弥) from his own common name upon his disciples as a customary element in theirs; from his school emerged such celebrated craftsmen as Namekawa Sadakatsu and Unno Shōmin. His two sons, Katsuyasu and Katsuho, continued the metalworking lineage — the elder adopted into the Suzuki family, the younger succeeding to the Hagiya line. Katsuhira died in Meiji 19 (1886) at the age of eighty-three.

Katsuhira's work is defined by the richly textural (high-relief carving) for which he was especially renowned, executed with a deep and forceful chisel and enriched throughout by polychrome (color metal inlay) employing gold, silver, , , , and hidō. His compositions display a Yokoya-school flavor — the observes that his manner of depicting lions "suggests that Katsuhira took Sōmin as a model" — yet are grounded firmly in the Mito metalworking idiom. He worked fluently across multiple ground treatments, from polished iron to with (stone-texture ground) and (hammered ground), adapting surface texture to narrative purpose. His pieces, though "comparatively uncommon within Mito metalwork as a whole," demonstrate command of a technique more often associated with earlier traditions. Whether depicting Hōjōe crane-release scenes, the Aridōshi shrine from the nō repertoire, rain dragons, or Buddhist subjects such as Fugen and Monju, his figure carving is singled out for its vivid expressiveness — Yoritomo's "cool, refreshing expression suggesting an inner vigor" is noted as "a quality that can only be expected from a first-rate Mito metalworker." Across his oeuvre, hira-zōgan for textile patterns, minute "dew" inlay for sea spray, and ko- (small openwork) complement the dominant to produce works of layered visual depth.

The consistently describes Katsuhira's output in terms of "compelling power and presence," "forceful vigor and technical refinement," and "an intense, forceful spirit" — language that positions him as a maker whose strength lay in muscular, richly worked compositions rather than restrained understatement. His works are repeatedly characterized as "meticulous and forceful," "exceptionally careful and deliberate," and "finished to an especially outstanding level even among the maker's works." The depicting Fugen and Monju are said to convey "an elegant and richly full-bodied feeling, attaining a refined nobility," while his complete suites are held to "vividly display the consummate skill of Mito tōsō craftsmanship." Taken together, the designation records affirm Katsuhira as one of the foremost representatives of Mito metalwork — a master in whom the full abilities of the tradition were brought to bear.

Kantei

3 descriptive axes: material (the full Mito soft-metal palette plus iron and worked grounds: shakudo, shibuichi, suaka, solid gold, ishime and tsuchime textures, and the comparatively uncommon shakudo-nanako) x technique (dense, forceful takabori with rich gold, silver and colour-metal iro-e and inlay, sukidashi-takabori and katachibori menuki) x themes (No-play and legendary narrative scenes, the Somin-modelled lion, the rain-dragon). His load-bearing discriminators within the Mito school are the Yokoya-Somin lion he takes as his model, his command of the intra-Mito-rare shakudo-nanako ground, and the Aridoshi-shrine subject the records call his favourite.

Hagiya Katsuhira (1804-1886), art-name Seiryoken, was the foremost metalwork artist of the Mito school in the closing years of the shogunate and into the Meiji era. Born at Mito as the second son of Terakado Yoshishige and adopted into the Hagiya family, he learned carving in the direct line of Mito kinko under Shinozaki Katsushige, served the domain as official carver (goyo horimonoshi) from 1844, and is repeatedly named in the records the pillar of the Mito metalworkers, the great representative of the tradition. He gave the character Ya from his own common name Yasuke to his pupils, among whom were the noted Namekawa Sadakatsu and Unno Shomin. His own hand is a dense, forceful high relief enriched throughout with polychrome iro-e and inlay, set on the full Mito ground palette; within that Mito idiom his lions are singled out as modelled on Yokoya Somin, he handles the - ground the records call comparatively uncommon among Mito work, and the No-play subject of the Aridoshi shrine is recorded as his favoured theme.

Diagnostic discriminators

unique vs the Mito school he leads (whose ground idiom is not Yokoya-derived)

two setsumei state outright that the shakudo-nanako method is comparatively uncommon among Mito metalwork as a whole, yet exists in Katsuhira and recurs in his lion-and-peony sets; an intra-Mito separator stated by the records, present on n=3 of 12 (low-n)

one setsumei calls the Aridoshi shrine outright his favourite subject; the records note the subject itself was taken up by many after the Nara master Yasuchika, but it recurs across Katsuhira's tsuba (n=3 of 12) as a personal theme, with his own front-and-back staging of the shrine-keeper and the torii (low-n)

Material (grounds)

He works fluently across the full Mito palette and beyond: above all, with , , solid gold, silver and among the soft metals, polished and textured iron grounds (, ), on , and the - ground the records note as comparatively uncommon in Mito work, adapting the surface to the subject.

Technique

His hand is a dense, forceful high relief, the chisel deep and the surface full of texture, enriched throughout with gold, silver, , and iro-e and inlay; he commands and , sets fine and - for textile patterns, and adds small openwork (ko-) and minute dew-inlay for sea-spray on his narrative plates.

Themes (narrative)

His subjects are above all narrative and legendary scenes carried in forceful figure-carving: the No-play Aridoshi shrine, Yoritomo's crane-release (Hojoe) at Tsurugaoka, the Bodhisattvas Fugen and Monju, the rain-dragon; with the lion-and-peony and the Somin-modelled lion among his recurring set-piece motifs.

No-play and legendary scenes

Story scenes set with forceful figures: the shrine-keeper of Aridoshi from the No play, Yoritomo watching the crane-release, figures of the Bodhisattvas, given vivid expression on textured grounds.

Set-piece creatures

The lion-and-peony and the lion modelled on Yokoya Somin, and the rain-dragon, carved as recurring set pieces in his dense high relief.

Full iconography

Signature chronology

Placement
Recorded signatures

Documentary note

He signs Katsuhira with a throughout, built up with the go Seiryoken, the family name Hagiya, and the Mito residence form Suifu-ju (Suifu = Mito): the corpus signatures run Seiryoken Hagiya Katsuhira, Suifu-ju Hagiya Katsuhira, Hagiya Katsuhira, Seiryoken Katsuhira, and the bare Katsuhira; on paired he splits a . One carries dated Meiji-5 (1872) signatures. His common name was Yasuke, of which the Ya character was passed to his pupils; the records give his father as Terakado Yoshishige, his adoptive house as Hagiya Jinbei, his teacher as Shinozaki Katsushige of the direct Mito line, and his sons as Katsuyasu (adopted into the Suzuki house) and Katsuho (who succeeded the Hagiya line).

Scholarship

The setsumei single his lions out as modelled on Yokoya Somin, a Yokoya borrowing carried into the Mito idiom.

Published Works

Jūyō— Vol. 59, No. 109 · uchigatana
Catalogue enriched by Hoshi
Feb 2026

Designations

Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin—
Gyobutsu—
Tokubetsu Jūyō—
Jūyō Tōken12

Elite Standing

0.09 across 12 designated works

Top 15% among makers

Work Types

Distribution across 12 ranked works

Tsuba
542%
Other
542%
Menuki
217%

Signatures

Signature types across 12 ranked works

Currently Available

Lineage

Katsuhira
Students (2)
  1. 1.Shomin勝珉11designated
  2. 2.Katsutoshi勝寿1designated

Mito School

Other artisans of the Mito school

  1. 1.Shomin勝珉11designated
  2. 2.Teikan貞幹5designated
  3. 3.Eiju/Hidetoshi栄寿1 for sale1designated
  4. 4.Hashizume Tomoyoshi橋詰知懿1designated
  5. 5.Yoshimori/Bisei美盛2designated
  6. 6.Mototomo元儔1designated
  7. 7.Moritoshi盛寿1designated
  8. 8.Hirotoshi弘寿6 for sale1designated
  9. 9.Motozane/Genpu元孚1 for sale1designated
  10. 10.Michitoshi通寿3 for sale2designated
  11. 11.Katsutoshi勝寿1designated

Katsuhira

Katsuhira(勝平) was a maker of Japanese sword fittings (tōsōgu) of the Mito school in Hitachi province, active during the Bunka–Meiji (1804-1886) period.

The work follows the Machibori tradition.

Designated works by Katsuhira include 12 Jūyō.