Description

(The *uwagai* of the *kin-kise nijū-habaki* is made of 11g of *kin-muku*) It has arrived, it has arrived—a famous *wakizashi* by Soshu-den master Yamashiro Daijo Minamoto Kunishige. Yamashiro Daijo Minamoto Kunishige, also known as Denshichiro, was a swordsmith active around the Jokyo era (1684) of the Edo period (341 years ago). He was the son of Ichizo Kunishige, the younger brother of Oyogo Kunishige who raised the fame of the Bitchu Mizuta smiths famous for Soshu-den. Because he sought his career in Edo, he is respectfully referred to as "Edo Mizuta." The *sugata* of this *wakizashi* shows a distinct difference between the *moto-mihaba* and *saki-mihaba* with shallow *sori*, making it an excellent shape for wearing at the waist. The *jigane* displays *itame-hada* mixed with *o-mokume-hada*, with abundant *chikei* appearing in the *ji*. The *horimono* consists of a *bo-hi* with *kaku-dome* and a *soe-hi*, which are masterfully carved. The *hamon* is a Soshu-den style *nie*-laden *suguha*-based *notare*, with active *働き* (hataraki) extending toward the *ji*; it is brightly and beautifully tempered. The Edo-period *koshirae* is magnificent. The *uwagai* of the *kin-kise nijū-habaki* is 11g of solid *kin-muku*, and the two *seppa* are *kin-kise seppa* (the gold alone is worth about 200,000 yen). The *saya* is a luxurious *ichibu-kizami* urushi-lacquered *saya* that cannot be replicated by modern craftsmen. The *tsuba* is *shakudo nanako-ji* with a paulownia leaf design in *kin-iro-e*. The *fuchi* is *shakudo migaki-ji*, the *kashira* is horn (*tsuno*), the *menuki* are *shakudo-ji* with a pine tree design, and the *kogai* is *shakudo nanako-ji* with a pine tree design. This luxurious and costly *koshirae* adds even more splendor to this Soshu-den Edo Mizuta *wakizashi* by Yamashiro Daijo Minamoto Kunishige. We have received this piece from an old collector with the request to pass it on to an enthusiast at a low price; therefore, we are offering it at a special bargain price. Please enjoy it.

山城大掾源国重 Yamashirodaijo Minamoto Kunishige

山城大掾源国重 Yamashirodaijo Minamoto Kunishige

Wakizashi

¥580,000

Tracked across 81 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive

Specifications

Nagasa

48.4 cm

Sori

0.5 cm

Motohaba

3.02 cm

Sakihaba

2 cm

About the school

Mizuta School水田派

In Bitchū Province at the close of the Muromachi period, the Mizuta group emerged at the village of that name, and successive generations took the name Kunishige. The setsumei trace their work across Matsuyama, Toribe, Ihara, Ebara, and Niimi, with their vitality carrying into the *shintō* era. The smiths the records cover form a recognizable line: Ko-Mizuta Kunishige, whose dated blade reaches Tenshō 20 (1592); the Niimi Saburōzaemon no Jō Kunishige, said by signature references (*meikan*) to have come from Bingo into the Niimi estate and afterward to have served the Mimura family, lords of Matsuyama Castle; Kunishige of Ihara, who signed "Bitchū no kuni Ihara-jū Kunishige saku"; Kunishige styled Ōtsukiyo Goemon, recorded as forging also at Fukuyama in Bingo and at Kawanami; and Ōtsuki Yogorō Kunishige, abbreviated "Daiyogo," son of Ōtsuki Saburōbei Kunishige, who came after the old Mizuta period and worked from the Kan'ei years. So many smiths bore the name Kunishige that the setsumei call the group's reliance on it overwhelming. The shared vocabulary is consistent across the entries. The *jigane* is *itame*, sometimes flowing and sometimes standing out, with *ji-nie* adhering and *chikei* entering; *utsuri* is visible on the older pieces. The *hamon* of the *shintō* hand rests on a *notare* or *ko-notare* base mixed with *gunome*, deep in *nioi*, with *nie* forming vigorously and at times breaking into coarse *ara-nie*; *sunagashi* and *kinsuji* run through, and *muneyaki* recurs frequently. On the Daiyogo katana the temper rises until the upper half is nearly *hitatsura*, an *ō-midare* in *notare* style with the *bōshi* burning down long toward the *mune-machi*. The *bōshi* elsewhere goes *midare-komi* with *hakikake*, taking a flame-like (*kaen*) cast or becoming *ichimai*-like. The Niimi blade adds *yakidaka* composition with angular and *yahazu*-like elements. These are the marks of the hand: a strong *nie*-laden Sōshū bearing on a serviceable, *iori-mune shinogi-zukuri* build, the signatures cut long toward the *mune*. For kantei the records single out the *notare* foundation worked with *gunome* and intense *nie*, the *yahazu* shapes and *ichimai bōshi* the setsumei name as "the highlights of the Mizuta manner," and the *ha-agari kurijiri* tang that rises markedly toward the edge. The *shintō* smiths are read by their pronounced Sōshū emphasis, the *kotō*-period Ko-Mizuta by a busier (*kosekose*) *gunome-midare* carrying *ko-chōji* and a tight *nioiguchi*. The setsumei describe these as cutting, utilitarian blades, and the Ihara daishō carries elaborate carving, including *kurikara*, "Marishiten," and the Nine Syllables. Named pieces anchor the line: the Niimi Kunishige is published in the *Kōzan Oshigata* and, by the record on its old scabbard, once served as the camp sword (*jin-tō*) of Bunjō-in, Tokugawa Ienobu, the sixth shōgun. Of Daiyogo the setsumei say few signed works survive, the loss attributed to mei being removed or blades shortened and reworked, yet they name him the leading master of the group and credit the school's spread through the Edo period to smiths of his ability.

Dealer

Nipponto

nipponto.co.jp

¥580,000

View on Nipponto