Description

It has arrived, it has arrived—a masterpiece from the lineage of Otsuki Yogoro Kunishige, famous as a representative smith of Shinto Soshu-den. The Bitchu Mizuta Kunishige school originated in Ebara, Bitchu around the Taiei era (1521, 503 years ago) at the end of the Muromachi period, and the Mizuta Kunishige smiths flourished across the country through the Shinto period. The representative smith of the Edo period, Otsuki Yogoro Kunishige, produced many excellent works that rivaled those of Masamune and Go no Yoshihiro; he was so skilled that many of his works were altered to pass as high-ranking Soshu-den masters during the Edo period. This sword is a masterpiece struck as a special-order item (tokubetsu chumon-hin) with a precious individual mei of Mizuta Kunishige Uemon, bearing a ninki of May 7th, Meireki 2 (1656, 368 years ago). The sugata of this sword exhibits a Koto-period style with little difference between the moto-mihaba and saki-mihaba. The jigane is forged in itame-hada, revealing a refined steel. The hamon is a nie-honitai gunome-midare with mixed togari-ba, showing variations in width and a flamboyant o-midare; the nie varies in size, creating a spirited edge. Towards the upper portion, the o-notare becomes wider and the nie becomes coarser; the boshi is ichimai-boshi with a deep kaeri, and there is muneyaki on the mune, brilliantly manifesting the Soshu-den style here. It is truly fortunate that this remained without being turned into mumei. The Edo-period koshirae is a luxurious shibuichi-kanagu issaku hantachi-koshirae featuring tiger menuki, adding further splendor to this masterpiece by Mizuta Uemon Kunishige. On this occasion, an old connoisseur has entrusted us with this wonderful and popular Shinto Soshu-den masterpiece by Mizuta Uemon Kunishige, which bears a precious ninki, with the request to pass it on to the next generation at a low price. Therefore, we are offering it at a special bargain price. Please enjoy it.

辰五月七備中水田国重作 水田宇右衛門 Bicchu Mizuta Kunishige
Tokuho

辰五月七備中水田国重作 水田宇右衛門 Bicchu Mizuta Kunishige

Katana

¥1,250,000

Tracked across 76 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive

Specifications

Nagasa

69.6 cm

Sori

1.5 cm

Motohaba

2.85 cm

Sakihaba

2.19 cm

About the maker

Mizuta Kunishige國重

2 Gyobutsu1 Jūyō Tōken

Kunishige worked within the Mizuta school of Bitchu Province, a lineage that flourished from the late Muromachi period into the Edo era. The most celebrated smith of this name is Otsuki Yogoro Kunishige, commonly abbreviated as "Daiyogo," who was the son of Otsuki Saburobei Kunishige and is recognized as the foremost master of the Mizuta school. The NBTHK observes that "the nationwide prosperity of this school during the Edo period was likely due to the presence of such superior craftsmen." Earlier work signed "Ko-Mizuta Kunishige" is dated to the late Muromachi period, with a katana bearing the date Tensho 20 (1592) among the few signed examples by the older lineage. The Ko-Mizuta works display a *kitae* of dense *ko-itame-hada* with *ji-nie* and *utsuri*, and a *hamon* built around *gunome-midare* as the principal theme, incorporating small *midare* and *ko-choji* in what the NBTHK describes as an "overall somewhat busy" manner, with a tightly formed *nioiguchi* and attached *ko-nie* as the chief point of appreciation. The later Daiyogo Kunishige, by contrast, excelled particularly in the *Soshu-den*, producing *itame-hada* with prominent standing grain, well-adhering *ji-nie*, and *chikei*, tempered in bold *notare*-style *o-midare* that in the upper half becomes nearly *hitatsura*, with deep *nioi* and coarse nie. The *boshi* on such works enters in irregular *midare-komi* with *hakikake*, burning down long to the *mune-machi*. The tang tip in the Mizuta manner is characteristically *ha-agari kurijiri*. Signed examples by both the Ko-Mizuta and Daiyogo lines are described as "comparatively few," lending particular significance to surviving blades. The Ko-Mizuta katana of Tensho 20 is called "not only a typical example, but also one of his representative works," while the Daiyogo Kunishige is praised as "a superior craftsman who exceeded his father's skill." This rarity of signed work is traditionally attributed to signatures being removed or blades being shortened and reworked into superior pieces -- a testament to the enduring regard in which Mizuta workmanship has been held.

Dealer

Nipponto

nipponto.co.jp

¥1,250,000

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