Description

This katana by Chôjusai Tsunatoshi, a student of Suishinshi Masahide, is a formidable late work dated 1861. It features a densely forged ko-itame jihada with Rai-style o-hada and a gentle suguha-based ko-midare hamon. The sword comes with a handsome Edo koshirae lacquered in byakudan-nuri with a peony pattern, certified NBTHK Hozon, and is accompanied by a shirasaya with a sayagaki by Tanobe Michihiro.

A CHÔJUSAI TSUNATOSHI KATANA (於東都長寿斎綱俊)
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A CHÔJUSAI TSUNATOSHI KATANA (於東都長寿斎綱俊)

Katana

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Tracked across 76 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive

Specifications

Nagasa

69.2 cm

Sori

1.7 cm

Motohaba

3.26 cm

About the maker

Suishinshi Masahide Tsunatoshi綱俊

3 Jūyō Tōken

Tsunatoshi was originally from Yonezawa in Dewa Province; his personal name was Kato Hachiro, and he used the art name Chounsai. He served as a domain smith for the Uesugi clan, later going to Edo and taking up residence in Azabu. He died in Bunkyu 3 (1863) at the age of sixty-six. His active career is documented through dated works spanning the Tenpo era, with productions from Tenpo 9 (1838) through Tenpo 12 (1841) among those that have received Juyo designation. Tsunatoshi's workmanship primarily followed the Bizen tradition. His specialty was a *choji* temper mixed with *gunome* in *nioi-deki*, with long *ashi* entering and the *nioiguchi* tending toward tightness; in addition, he produced *suguha* and *toran-midare*. The *toran*-flavored mode achieves a large *o-gunome midare* with *tama-yaki*, *nie* adhering somewhat unevenly, and *hakikake* at the *boshi*. Across all styles, his forging is characteristically a tightly compacted *ko-itame* that tends toward a *muji*-like appearance -- the plain, featureless-looking steel common in *shinshinto* work, though in Tsunatoshi's case worked with particular density and carrying *ji-nie*. His *horimono* are noteworthy: *bo-hi* with accompanying *soe-bi*, *bonji*, *shinkurikara*, *gomabashi*, and claws, at times executed by the smith's own hand as documented by tang inscriptions stating the carvings were by the maker himself. Tsunatoshi's extant designated works include katana, wakizashi, and a matched *daisho* pair -- the survival of which as a set makes it "especially useful reference material" in the NBTHK's assessment. His productions range from imposing katana of 75.5 cm with extremely deep *sori* to *hira-zukuri* wakizashi with elaborate carving, and one piece retains its original payment receipt addressed to the commissioning patron, providing documentary evidence of the domain smith's working practice.

Dealer

Unique Japan

uniquejapan.com

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