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OverviewKanteiDesignationsProvenanceWork TypesSignaturesLineageSchool
  1. Schools
  2. Yokoya
  3. Yanagawa
  4. Ishiguro
  5. Masayoshi

Ishiguro Masayoshi

政美

Tokujū
Vol. 17, No. 73 · Tsuba

Ishiguro Masayoshi

政美

30 ranked works

ProvinceMusashiEraKansei-Bunkyū (1774–1862)SchoolYokoya>Yanagawa>IshiguroTraditionMachiboriGeneration2nd genTeacherMasatsuneSpecialtiestsuba, fuchi-kashira, kozuka, menuki, koshiraeTypeTosogu MakerCodeISH004
6Tokubetsu Jūyō24Jūyō Tōken

Overview

Ishiguro Masayoshi (石黒政美), also read Masami, was a preeminent master of the Ishiguro school, a distinguished lineage of -period metalworkers descended from the Yokoya tradition. Born in An'ei 3 (1774), his common name was Shōzō, and he employed a succession of art names including Jugakusai, Jukakusai, Juōsai, and Juō. He first trained under Sano Naoyoshi of the Yanagawa school before entering the atelier of Ishiguro Masatsune, the founder of the Ishiguro house. In tribute to both teachers, he derived his art name by taking one character from each master's name and substituting the character mi (美) for (好), thus arriving at Masayoshi (政美). Extant works bearing the inscription "Third-generation Ishiguro Masayoshi" confirm that he succeeded as the third head of the family following the second Masatsune. Within the school he was celebrated alongside his fellow pupil Masaaki as forming a "matched pair" of supreme ability, and he trained numerous disciples who carried the Ishiguro manner into the late period.

Masayoshi's technical command encompassed the full repertoire of the Ishiguro school's metalworking vocabulary. His preferred format was a ground finished in dense upon which elaborate pictorial compositions were built through executed as applied motifs in the technique, enriched with lavish polychrome employing gold, silver, , and scarlet copper (hiirōdō). His , , , , and frequently formed unified suites—soroi or complete sets—demonstrating rigorous thematic coherence across every fitting. While the school's signature kachō-zu (flowers-and-birds) subjects predominated, Masayoshi proved equally commanding in martial themes: hawks poised on rocks above raging torrents, raptors fixed upon prey amid aged pines, and dragon-and-tiger compositions rendered through varied relief techniques from through rounded modeling to full high relief. He also worked with distinction on and grounds, and produced refined and line-engraving on solid-gold fittings, as seen in his celebrated "Four Gentlemen" suite. His works inscribed at the age of seventy-seven and seventy-eight confirm an undiminished creative intensity sustained across decades.

Masayoshi occupies a central place in the history of late metalwork as the artist who brought the Ishiguro school's painterly idiom to its fullest expression. His compositions reveal a pictorial intelligence that extends beyond virtuoso carving: front and reverse surfaces are linked through continuous branches and contrasting water motifs, male and female birds are paired with deliberate compositional care, and the interplay of a- expression lends narrative depth to each scene. The examiners have repeatedly noted that his finest pieces represent works in which "Masayoshi's full capabilities are brought to fruition," praising both the steadfast precision of his chisel work at the smallest scale and the monumental presence of his high-relief compositions. Whether rendering the opulent splendor of peacocks with peonies or the austere nobility of a solitary hawk upon iron, Masayoshi demonstrated a range and mastery that secured his standing as one of the foremost tōsōgu artists of the late Tokugawa period.

Kantei

3 descriptive axes: material (shakudo-nanako above all) x technique (dense high relief and applied suemon with rich iro-e) x themes (bird-and-flower realism, the hawk his house subject). His load-bearing discriminators are the dense kacho realism and the effective copper-red accents.

Ishiguro Masayoshi, third master of the Ishiguro school, is one of its two pillars with Masaaki, an kinko of the early-to-mid nineteenth century working out of the Yokoya line. The Ishiguro art is dense, vivid bird-and-flower realism in high relief with rich iro-e on -, and Masayoshi carries it to a height: the hawk is his house subject, and his effective use of copper-red accents and an extreme-relief applied carving are named his own domain. Trained first under Sano Naoyoshi of the Yanagawa line and then under the first Ishiguro Masatsune, he was a retained craftsman of the Shimazu and a strong influence on Satsuma metalwork.

Diagnostic discriminators

bird-and-flower realism is the defining Ishiguro matter, dense and vivid, of which he is a leading hand; about half the corpus depicts it (the keyword recurs in the boilerplate bio, so do not over-read the raw match count)

he and his school are singled out for the effective use of copper-red accents in the iro-e

Material (grounds)

worked in fine above all, with -grey ishime and besides; copper-red is used as an effective colour accent.

Technique

Dense high relief and applied with rich gold, silver and colour-metal iro-e, the in ; the density of the relief is named his own domain.

Themes (bird-and-flower)

Bird-and-flower above all: the hawk his house subject, with peacock, golden pheasant, sparrows and small birds among peony and flowers, a few figural pieces besides.

Bird-and-flower realism

Hawks and birds of prey, peacock and golden pheasant, sparrows and small birds among peony, rendered with dense, colourful realism.

Full iconography

Signature chronology

Placement
Recorded signatures

Documentary note

He signs in full as Jugakusai Ishiguro Masayoshi or simply Ishiguro Masayoshi, with a ; in late life as Juo, often with his age, and as Jukakusai; sometimes with the generation marker third-generation Ishiguro, or under his birth name Shozo. Nearly all his work is signed. The records disagree on his birth year, an account giving 1764 and the dominant one 1774; both are kept. A carp-fish set modelled after Iwamoto Konkan is his homage, not Konkan's hand.

Scholarship

The density of his applied carving is named his own domain, a point of his work.

Designations

Kokuhō—
Jūyō Bunkazai—
Jūyō Bijutsuhin—
Gyobutsu—
Tokubetsu Jūyō6
Jūyō Tōken24

Elite Standing

0.30 across 30 designated works

Top 3% among makers

Provenance

1 documented provenance across certified works by Masayoshi

Provenance Standing

1 works held in elite collections across 1 documented provenances

Top 96% among makers

Raw score: 1.83 / 10

Work Types

Distribution across 30 ranked works

Other
1137%
Tsuba
1137%
Mitokoromono
413%
Fuchi-Kashira
413%

Signatures

Signature types across 30 ranked works

Currently Available

Lineage

TeacherMasatsune
Masayoshi
Student
  1. 1.Koreyoshi是美4designated

Ishiguro School

Other artisans of the Ishiguro school

  1. 1.Masatsune政常1 for sale17designated
  2. 2.Masaaki政明16designated
  3. 3.Koreyoshi是美4designated
  4. 4.Koretsune是常2 for sale4designated
  5. 5.Mitsutsune光常1designated
  6. 6.Masatsune政恒1designated
  7. 7.Masaharu政春1designated
  8. 8.Masachika政近2designated

Masayoshi

Masayoshi(政美) was a maker of Japanese sword fittings (tōsōgu) of the Ishiguro school in Musashi province, active during the Kansei-Bunkyū (1774-1862) period.

The work follows the Machibori tradition.

Designated works by Masayoshi include 6 Tokubetsu Jūyō, 24 Jūyō.