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  1. Schools
  2. Higo Kinko
  3. Nishigaki
  4. Kanshiro

Nishigaki Kanshiro

勘四郎

Jūyō
Vol. 7, No. 86 · Tsuba

Nishigaki Kanshiro

勘四郎

31 ranked works

ProvinceHigoEraEarly Edo (1613–1693)SchoolHigo Kinko>NishigakiTraditionHigoGeneration1st genTeacherHikozoSpecialtiestsuba, inlayTypeTosogu MakerCodeNIS001
31Jūyō Tōken

Overview

Nishigaki Kanshiro, also known as Yoshihiro, was born in Keicho 18 (1613) at Nakatsu in Buzen Province, the son of a priest. He became a disciple of Hirata Hikozo, received full transmission licensing (soden menkyo), and established himself independently. He subsequently entered the service of the Hosokawa family as a retained craftsman (kakae-ko), receiving a stipend of twenty persons' rations from Hosokawa Sansai Tadaoki. In the twelfth month of 'ei 9 (1632), he accompanied his lord upon transfer of fief and relocated to Yatsushiro in Province, later moving again to the artisans' quarter in Kumamoto. Together with the Hayashi, Hirata, and Shimizu families, he formed the mainstream of the group of metalsmiths and founded the Nishigaki school, counted among the four great lineages of metalworkers. Hayashi Matashichi was of the generation, born in the year; because their materials and manner of workmanship share certain similarities, the two have often been contrasted in terms of artistic character: Matashichi is said to possess the dignified bearing of a kunshi, whereas Kanshiro is characterized as having the elegant refinement of a . Both absorbed the cultivation of Hosokawa Sansai and gave expression upon the to a poetic resonance (fuin) informed by the aesthetics of tea. The second-generation Kanshiro, the eldest son of the founder, bore the common name Mosaku and also used the names Yoshito and Eikyu; he was born in 'ei 16 (1639) and died in Kyoho 2 (1717) at the age of seventy-nine. The first Kanshiro died in the sixth month of Genroku 6 (1693) at the age of eighty-one.

The first-generation Kanshiro excelled particularly in iron (ground openwork) plates, working favored motifs including the tokiri or nagekiri (throwing paulownia), edagiri (branching paulownia), aged pine (oimatsu), and chrysanthemum designs. The tokiri design takes a cursive-style paulownia blossom crest and abstracts it into openwork; because of its appearance it is also called odori- (dancing paulownia) or nimai- (two-sheet paulownia). His iron plates characteristically display a gentle, pliant quality with a distinctive "taste" (aji), and his patination frequently shows the so-called yokan-iro — a deep, lustrous reddish-brown reminiscent of sweet bean jelly. Many of his works adopt the shodeigata profile with a subtly flared lower portion (shita-bari), and his outlines often incorporate a deliberate, slight distortion that creates an uneven, varied movement across the design. The distribution of thickness () is thoughtfully devised, and his (hairline engraving) is characteristically fine and animated, applied with attentive density yet never pressing or forced. A compositional hallmark is the "positive-and-negative" (in') structuring of openwork, as seen in chrysanthemum where the flower form serves simultaneously as silhouette and ground design. Distinguishing features from works of the Hayashi school include gentler carving contours, more animated leaf-vein lines, and a distinctive treatment whereby the inner edge of the rim takes on a chrysanthemum-flower-like character. While the first generation worked primarily in iron, examples in copper (sudo) and brass (shinchu) also exist, following the precedent of his teacher Hirata Hikozo. The second-generation Kanshiro, by contrast, demonstrates his true strengths in works that make sophisticated use of inlay on brass or grounds.

The Nishigaki school occupies a position of singular importance within the metalworking tradition. Works of such high tone and strong individuality captivated viewers, and the designs of Kanshiro's were copied in great numbers by makers of Akasaka and by Tosa Myochin; however, it is with Kanshiro that this manner is regarded as having its beginning. His mature works embody the quiet austerity (sabimi) and refined elegance (gashu) associated with the Hosokawa tradition of tea, expressing a richness communicated in a restrained and dignified way. The influence of Hosokawa Sansai — celebrated both as a tea devotee and as one of the "Seven Sages of Rikyu" — is manifest throughout Kanshiro's oeuvre in the poetic sensibility that pervades each composition. Whether in the unrestrained freedom of his paulownia openwork, the suggestive resonance of open spaces, or the sophisticated interplay of form and negative space, Kanshiro's art conveys precisely the cultivated elegance of the lofty recluse with which his name has long been associated.

Kantei

3 descriptive axes: material (the well-forged iron plate, soft polished or hammered ground, taking the yokan-colour patina) x technique (ji-sukashi openwork finished with fine hairline engraving) x themes (paulownia, pine and chrysanthemum devices). His load-bearing discriminators against the neighbouring Hayashi hand are the down-spread aori form with its characteristic distortion, the chrysanthemum-form rim echoed inside the openwork, and the yokan-colour patina.

The first-generation Nishigaki Kanshiro is the founder of the Nishigaki line, which the records count with the Hayashi, Hirata and Shimizu houses as one of the four great schools of metalwork. Pupil of Hirata Hikozo and a retainer of the Hosokawa lord Sansai, he is repeatedly paired with Hayashi Matashichi, his exact contemporary, as the second master of the iron guard. His art is the forged iron plate cut in openwork: well-forged iron worked to a soft, polished or hammered ground that takes the patina the records call yokan-colour, on which paulownia, pine and chrysanthemum devices are pierced and finished with fine hairline engraving. Said to have been born in 1613 at Nakatsu in Buzen, the son of a priest, and to have died in 1693 aged eighty-one; all his accepted work is unsigned.

Diagnostic discriminators

the records name the down-spread aori form a major feature of his work, often carried with a deliberate distortion of the plate, set against the more regular forms of the neighbouring Hayashi school

the setsumei give the chrysanthemum-form rim, echoed inside the openwork as a yin-yang figure, as the distinguishing point against the Hayashi version of the same device

the patina is repeatedly likened to the colour of yokan and named a mark of his iron

Material (the iron plate)

Well-forged iron, worked most often to a soft polished ground and sometimes to a hammered ground, with a softness the records repeatedly praise and a patina they liken to the colour of yokan; following his teacher Hirata Hikozo he also worked and brass plates inlaid in openwork and nunome.

Technique

Ground openwork () above all, the pierced devices then finished with hairline engraving for the veins of pine needles and paulownia leaves; nunome and inlaid-device work appears on his soft-metal plates, and a relief on a few.

Themes (devices in openwork)

Paulownia above all, in the okite-mono nagegiri (tossed-paulownia) device, with pine in its distant-pine, old-pine and three-tier forms, and chrysanthemum cut as a yin-yang openwork; the Hosokawa nine-luminary crest and arabesque appear inlaid on his soft-metal plates.

Higo okite-mono devices

The pierced paulownia, pine and chrysanthemum devices counted as the set okite-mono of the schools, here cut in and finished with hairline engraving.

Full iconography

Documentary note

All accepted work of the first generation is unsigned; the records state plainly that the founder left no in- pieces and that any signed Nishigaki Kanshiro guard is by a later hand. Attribution rests on the iron, the carving and the okite-mono devices. The second-generation Kanshiro (named Yoshimasa or Eikyu, born 1639) does sign, with such as Nishigaki Kanshiro Eikyu, and turned to inlaid work in brass and rather than the founder's iron openwork; two pieces in this corpus, the four-hare plate and a signed Eikyu nagegiri guard, are recorded as second-generation and are noted here only to keep the founder distinct.

Scholarship

Where Hayashi Matashichi is likened to the bearing of a gentleman, Kanshiro is contrasted as carrying the elegance of a lofty recluse.

Designations

Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin—
Gyobutsu—
Tokubetsu Jūyō—
Jūyō Tōken31

Elite Standing

0.15 across 31 designated works

Top 8% among makers

Provenance

1 documented provenance across certified works by Kanshiro

Provenance Standing

1 works held in elite collections across 1 documented provenances

Top 70% among makers

Raw score: 1.94 / 10

Work Types

Distribution across 31 ranked works

Tsuba
2787%
Other
413%

Signatures

Signature types across 31 ranked works

Currently Available

Lineage

TeacherHikozo
Kanshiro
Student
  1. 1.Nagahisa永久1 for sale5designated

Nishigaki School

Other artisans of the Nishigaki school

  1. 1.Nagahisa永久1 for sale5designated

Kanshiro

Kanshiro(勘四郎) was a maker of Japanese sword fittings (tōsōgu) of the Nishigaki school in Higo province, active during the Early Edo (1613-1693) period.

The work follows the Higo tradition.

Designated works by Kanshiro include 31 Jūyō.