
ぐり彫縁頭 平田春就(花押)
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Tracked across 76 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive
About the maker
Hirata-Edo Harunari春就
Hirata Harunari was the eighth-generation master of the Hirata school, a lineage founded by Hirata Donin (also recorded as Hirata Michihito), who was celebrated for expressing the sumptuous beauty of Momoyama-period art in sword fittings through the medium of *shippo* (cloisonne enamel). As hereditary specialists in service to the Edo shogunate, the Hirata house transmitted its enameling techniques across successive generations. Harunari stands out as an especially accomplished artisan within that lineage: unlike other heads of the family, he did not confine himself to the hereditary *shippo* alone but also practiced *chokin* (metal carving), and for that reason left behind works employing a wide variety of methods. Following Harunari, the Hirata family continued to make full use of its inherited cloisonne expertise, undertaking the production of decorations and orders for the Meiji government. Harunari's *shippo* work employs predominantly gold cloisonne, yielding an elegant effect; many of his pieces are, in every respect, exceptionally beautiful. His gold-wire cloisonne inlays (*kinsen shippo zogan*) are arranged with remarkable effect, producing enamel tonalities that are highly transparent and clear -- a quality that distinguishes late-period Hirata work from the earlier manner, in which *doro shippo* was heaped up in thicker relief. In works combining cloisonne with carving, his *takabori* is executed through precise and accurate chisel handling, and a range of colored metals -- gold, silver, *shibuichi*, and *suaka* -- is employed so that even the finest details are rendered with exactitude. Among his oeuvre there are also works that do not employ *shippo* at all, yet are executed with finely controlled workmanship -- neat, delicate, and painstakingly thorough. The NBTHK has consistently recognized Harunari as a maker whose output gathers together the very essence of *shippo* inlay while simultaneously demonstrating crisp, masterful carving skill. His pieces are described as exceptionally dignified in tone, and his best works stand as excellent demonstrations of the high technical level attained by this maker. That Harunari was thoroughly conversant with multiple techniques -- uniting the Hirata tradition of cloisonne with extremely meticulous metal-carving work -- places him in a singular position within the late Edo-period tosogu world, an artisan whose versatility elevated the hereditary art of his house to its fullest expression.

