説明

区を送り先を摘んだような形状の茎で、やや寸が詰まり重ねが厚くフクラ枯れる姿が特徴的な短刀です。明るい互の目乱れ刃文は帽子を長く焼き下げて棟を焼いて豪快です。柴田果は、柴田政太郎といい、明治十七年生まれ、秋田県西馬音内に住しました。当初、佐藤重則の協力を得、のち宮口一貫斎寿広に作刀指導を受け、昭和九年、帝展入選、昭和十年、新作日本刀大共進会で特別最優等賞を受賞しました。戦時中は東奔西走軍刀報国に任じ、篆刻、俳句その他多芸な刀匠であったと伝えられます。弟子に鈴木国慶がおり、子息の柴田昊も刀匠です。 昭和二十八年三月に没しました。 素銅地一重ハバキ、白鞘、白鞘袋、登録証(北海道 第37331号 平成15年8月25日交付)

短刀 白鞘入り

短刀 白鞘入り

短刀

¥600,000

世界81社の刀剣商を横断追跡 · 価格履歴 · 売却アーカイブ

時代

Showa (1926-1989)

仕様

長さ

23.7 cm

元幅

2.96 cm

作者について

Shibata Ka柴田果

Shibata Ka (柴田果, 1884–1953) was an independent gendaitō swordsmith of late Meiji through early Shōwa, whose real name was Shibata Masatarō (柴田政太郎). Born in Nishimonai (西馬音内) of Ogachi District in present-day Akita Prefecture — historically part of Dewa (Ugo) Province — he came from a wealthy merchant family and pursued swordmaking as a serious avocation alongside careers in seal-carving (篆刻), haiku poetry, and local politics. Inspired by his grandfather Shibata Tasuke's sword collection, he first received instruction from Satō Shigenori, who taught him the oroshi-gane iron-smelting method and the fundamentals of forging, and subsequently became the principal disciple of Miyaguchi Ikkansai Toshihiro (later Miyaguchi Yasuhiro of the Yasukuni Shrine swordsmiths). He worked from his Akita home as a civilian smith outside the institutional schools of his era, and trained a son who also signed swords and a recorded disciple, Suzuki Kuniyoshi (鈴木邦芳). His output centers on tantō, which survive in comparatively greater number; full-length katana and tachi by his hand are scarce and correspondingly prized. He is particularly noted for utsushimono — careful copies of classical schools — including Ichimonji-style works, and during the wartime years he produced military-grade gunto as well. He signed primarily 果作 ("Ka saku") and 柴田果 ("Shibata Ka"), often with dedicatory inscriptions for named patrons, and an unusual alternate signature 光起 (Mitsuoki) has been recorded on at least one Ichimonji-utsushi, the reason for which remains unsettled in the literature. Within the gendaitō circle Shibata Ka attained the highest contemporary recognition. He took 2nd place at the 1934 Imperial Exhibition (帝展), won the Special Grand Prize at the 1935 New Japanese Sword Exhibition (top of 500 entries), and in 1937 was awarded the rank of Kokkō (国工) — the supreme title bestowed by the Greater Japan Sword Craftsmen Association — together with the related Gon-Daisōshō (権大宗匠) standing. He served as a judge of the New Japanese Sword Exhibition and was listed among the "Twelve Shinpin" (神品の列), the era's tier of "divine-quality" master smiths. His blades have been judged at NBTHK Hozon level and continue to be valued both as accomplished gendaitō workmanship and as material evidence of the pre-war Akita scholarly-amateur tradition that produced one of its most respected modern smiths.

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刀剣小町

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¥600,000

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