Description

This is an Edo era tsuba made by Yurakusai Sekibun. The tsuba features a tiger with bamboo design, with the tiger inlaid with gold. The reverse side depicts clouds and wind carved in the sukidashi-bori style.

Tsuba [Yurakusai Sekibun Taketora-zu Tsuba][N.B.T.H.K] Tokubetsu Hozon Tousougu
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Tsuba [Yurakusai Sekibun Taketora-zu Tsuba][N.B.T.H.K] Tokubetsu Hozon Tousougu

Tsuba

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About the maker

Hamano Sekibun赤文

8 Jūyō Tōken

Katsurano Sekibun, who employed the art name Yurakusai, was born in Kansei 2 (1790) at Murakami in Echigo Province. As a young man he traveled to Edo and studied under the Hamano family, acquiring the foundational discipline of that distinguished lineage. From his adoption of the art name Yurakusai, it is further conjectured that he undertook training in Kyoto, broadening his technical and aesthetic formation beyond a single school. In Bunsei 7 (1824) he entered the service of the Sakai family of Shonai domain as a retained artisan (*kakae-ko*), and from Koka 2 (1845) onward he settled permanently in Tsuruoka, where he continued to work until his death in Meiji 8 (1875) at the remarkable age of eighty-seven. For his inscriptions he used a distinctive cursive hand modeled on the calligraphic style of Kameda Bosai, the celebrated scholar of his native Echigo. Sekibun devoted himself to the study of Tsuchiya Yasuchika, refining his skills with that master's example as his ideal, and produced an oeuvre in which *tsuba* are especially numerous. For the ground metal he frequently employed iron and *shakudo*, and he "excelled especially at applying *iroe* to a style of strongly modeled high-relief carving." His technical repertoire further encompassed *sukidashi-bori*, *katakiribori*, *nikuai-bori*, and various forms of *zogan* (inlay). Among pictorial subjects he favored animals and birds, with tigers and newts (*imori*) counted as particular strengths. His celebrated "Dawn Crow" (*Akegarasu*) *tsuba*, conceived as the sky at daybreak with *suaka* ground and *shakudo suemon-zogan* crows beating toward the sun, is singled out by the NBTHK alongside his octagonal newt-design *tsuba* as among his finest achievements. The NBTHK consistently characterizes Sekibun's work as possessing a "high degree of refinement" in both composition and carving method, praising his "compositional command and carving skill" as "truly superb." His productions are recognized for their distinctive vitality -- an intensity of expression deemed "indeed characteristic of Akafumi" -- realized through the full mobilization of a wide range of carving methods together with inlay and polychrome metalwork techniques. Whether working on intimate *tsuba* or ambitious multi-component *soroi kanagu* such as his Twelve Zodiac fitting set, Sekibun's works are commended as fully demonstrating the "sharpness of the maker's abilities," securing his place as one of the most accomplished provincial metalworkers of the late Edo period.

Dealer

World Seiyudo

world-seiyudo.com

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