
Lot Closed
March 25, 04:09 PM GMT
Estimate
5,000 - 7,000 USD
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Read more.Lot Details
Description
Two tsuba
The first attributed to Tsunashige
Edo period, 18th – 19th century
the first Shoami school, the circular sentoku tsuba inlaid in gold and shakudo with an autumn maple tree and partially closed fan on a woven basket ground, the reverse with the hat of a bugaku dancer, the hitsu-ana plugged, chased and engraved with plum, autumn grasses, chrysanthemums and bamboo, raised nawame fukurin, unsigned; the second Toryusai school, the mokko-gata iron tsuba inlaid in gold with plovers (chidori) above crashing waves, with raised rim, unsigned
The first accompanied by a certificate of registration as Tokubetsu Kicho Kodogu [Especially Precious Fitting], no. 1352 issued by the Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyokai [Society for the Preservation of the Japanese Art Sword], dated Showa 55 (1980).
The second accompanied by a certificate of registration as Hozon Tosogu [Sword Fitting Worthy of Preservation], no. 454404 issued by the Nihon Bijutsu Token Hozon Kyokai [Society for the Preservation of the Japanese Art Sword], dated Heisei 20 (2008).
7.5 cm., 3 in. (the first)
8.5 cm., 3¾ in. (the second)
Art of the Samurai: The Paul L. Davidson Collection (New York, 2023), p. 70 and 72.
The design of the first tsuba is probably an allegory to the Momoji-gari dance which is performed in the autumn. Toryusai is the name of the school of artists who worked in the Tanaka group style.
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