Description

This is a Mino school tsuba from the mid Edo period. It features a design of Japanese clover (hagi) carved in high relief on a shakudo nanako ground with gold accents. The tsuba is in excellent condition and comes with a kiri (paulownia) wood box.

萩図鍔(鐔) 無銘 美濃
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萩図鍔(鐔) 無銘 美濃

Tsuba

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Tracked across 76 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive

School

Mino

Era

Edo

About the school

Mino School美濃派

4 Jūyō Tōken

The Mino metalworking tradition emerged as a distinct school of early *kinkō* (sword-fittings artisans) active from the late Muromachi period through the Momoyama era. Rooted in the broader stream of *ko-kanagu-shi* (early metal-fittings makers), Mino craftsmen developed alongside but separate from the courtly Gotō lineage, serving a different aesthetic sensibility. Their chronological range extended through the transition into the early Edo period, though the tradition's characteristic vocabulary crystallized during the turbulent decades of the late sixteenth century. The hallmark of Mino workmanship lies in its distinctive approach to relief carving and decorative treatment. Rather than the refined, minutely detailed dragons favored by the Gotō house, Mino artisans developed the specialized "Mino dragon" (*Mino-ryū*) idiom: large-scale compositions executed in *usukin-dashi* (thin raised metal), characterized by sinuous, writhing forms with extensive *sukashi* (openwork). Beyond dragon motifs, Mino craftsmen rendered auspicious subjects—cranes, turtles, pine, and bamboo—as well as floral designs such as wisteria in *karakusa* (arabesque) arrangements. The technical vocabulary consistently emphasizes vigorous *yōbori* (high-relief carving) with robust, thick-boned modeling and forceful execution, often on grounds of *shakudō nanako-ji* or solid gold, with enrichment through gold *iroe* and inlay. Works attributed to the Mino school are valued for their sumptuous materiality and animated sculptural presence. The tradition's preference for deeply cut relief with pronounced peaks and valleys creates a dynamic visual effect distinct from the more restrained aesthetic of contemporary Kyoto workshops. Surviving examples of Mino metalwork—ranging from *menuki* and *kogai* to complete *koshirae* suites—document a regional aesthetic that prioritized bold composition and vigorous carving over courtly refinement, reflecting the martial culture of the Sengoku and early unification periods.

Dealer

Choshuya

ginza.choshuya.co.jp

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