Description

This is a very valuable item, please consider carefully before bidding. This item is a very rare and valuable piece. It is a beautiful piece with a refined appearance. The workmanship is excellent, and it is a truly wonderful piece. Please consider it carefully. This item is a very old piece, dating back to the 9th year of Eisho (1512) to the 5th year of Eiroku (1562) (a period of 50 years). It is a very rare and valuable item. Please consider it carefully. There are some scratches and wear due to age. Please understand this before bidding. There are some minor scratches and stains. Please understand this before bidding. This item is a very old piece, and there may be some slight imperfections. Please understand this before bidding. There are approximately 20 pieces of kozuka. There are also some menuki and other small items. Please consider them carefully. This item dates back to the 5th year of Eiroku (1562). It is a very rare and valuable piece. Please consider it carefully. There may be some slight imperfections. Please understand this before bidding. Please consider it carefully. This is a very valuable item, please consider carefully before bidding. The number of items is approximately 1750, and the number of items with certification is 267. There are approximately 20 items with certification, and approximately 300 items without certification. Please understand this before bidding. This item is a very old piece, so please understand this before bidding. Please consider it carefully. There are some minor scratches and wear due to age. Please understand this before bidding.

m-102 目貫 鴛鴦(おしどり)の図 赤銅地(無銘乗真光守折紙付属)

m-102 目貫 鴛鴦(おしどり)の図 赤銅地(無銘乗真光守折紙付属)

Menuki

¥550,000

Tracked across 81 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive

About the maker

Goto Joshin後藤乗真

1 Jūyō Bijutsuhin5 Tokubetsu Jūyō61 Jūyō Tōken

Goto Joshin, the third head of the mainline Goto house, was the legitimate son of the second master, Sojo. Born in Eisho 10 (1513), he bore the common name Jiro and the personal name (*imina*) Yoshihisa, later styling himself Genshiro Harumitsu. He served two successive Ashikaga shoguns, Yoshiharu and Yoshiteru, and held an estate of three hundred *cho* at Sakamoto in Omi Province. Joshin combined responsibilities in both metalwork and financial administration, and the NBTHK setsumei consistently note that he was "not only a metalworker but also a warrior," possessed of "a bold and valiant temperament." His dual vocation as craftsman and fighting man ended on the sixth day of the third month of Eiroku 5 (1562), when, owing to conflict with the Azai clan of northern Omi, he was attacked by Azai Ryomasa and killed in battle at the age of fifty-one. Within the Goto lineage he stands as a pivotal figure between the founding generation of Yujo and Sojo and the later masters who would enter Tokugawa service; several of his works survive as composite sets in which the sixth master Eijo or the ninth master Norinori supplied supplementary carvings to complete *mitokoromono* and *mitsudogu* ensembles begun by Joshin's hand. Joshin's works are executed overwhelmingly on *shakudo* *nanako-ji* grounds and are characterized, in the NBTHK's repeated formulation, by "large scale, forceful presence, and carving that fills the entire field." The setsumei invoke a vivid spatial metaphor to describe his relief technique: "high mountains and deep valleys" — a modulation of volume in which the modeling rises emphatically from the ground while the recesses are cut deep and clean, producing what the assessors call "a pleasing sense of dynamism." His *takabori* is distinguished by "numerous triangular chisel marks" that "heighten the clarity and crispness of the workmanship," and by chisel lines that are consistently described as "tight" and "controlled." Among the Goto house's prescribed motifs (*okitemono*), Joshin treated the *Kurikara-ryu* dragon, paired lions (*renjishi*), and crawling dragon (*hairyu*) across successive generations, but his interpretations are set apart by their conspicuously larger scale and by claws that are "characteristically large and long, with the tips splayed open." His subjects range from auspicious themes — dragons that "raise clouds, call rain, and ascend to the heavens" — to martial motifs befitting a warrior-craftsman, including matchlock accoutrements, horse trappings, and bow-and-arrow compositions. Regardless of subject, his gold ornaments (*kinmon*) are described as "rich and brimming with strength," with the quality of the gold itself praised as "excellent" and "lustrous" against the deep tonality of jet-black shakudo. Works in solid gold (*kinmuku*) such as his *renjishi* menuki display "superb control of volume," while his *iroe* coloring in gold and silver achieves what the NBTHK calls "an especially pleasing chromatic effect." The evaluative language applied to Joshin across his designated works is remarkably consistent: his carving is "abundant in volume and mass," his compositions "grand" and "dignified," and his finished pieces exhibit "an archaic dignity" and "elevated tone" that place them among the finest achievements of the early Goto house. The setsumei repeatedly conclude that individual works "fully manifest Joshin's true merit" or "display Jōshin's true merit to the fullest," a formulaic endorsement reserved for pieces judged to be wholly representative of a master's capability. His surviving oeuvre has been authenticated across centuries by successive Goto house heads — Kenjo (seventh generation), Teijo (ninth), Renjo (tenth), Mitsumori (fourteenth), and Mitsutaka (thirteenth) — whose *origami* appraisals, some dating to the early Edo period, are themselves regarded as documents "of great documentary value." Works bearing Joshin's attribution have been transmitted in such distinguished collections as the Konoike, Asano of Geishu, and Omaeda of Kaga families, underscoring that, even in his own era, fittings of this caliber could only have been commissioned by warriors of considerable rank.

Dealer

Nipponto

nipponto.co.jp

¥550,000

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