Description

This is a set of sword fittings made by Katsuhira Hagiya, who was active in the late Edo period. The fittings are designated as Tokubetsu Hozon Tosogu by the NBTHK. The piece depicts two quails with autumn grasses and flowers on a shakudo nanako ground, evoking the atmosphere of a tea ceremony hanging scroll.

刀装具
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刀装具

Tosogu

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About the maker

Mito Katsuhira勝平

12 Jūyō Tōken

Hagiya Katsuhira (萩谷勝平), art name Seiryōken (生涼軒), was born in Mito on the twentieth day of the tenth month of Bunka 1 (1804) as the second son of Terakado Yoshishige. He was adopted into the Hagiya family through Hagiya Jinbei of Kamikanemachi, and took the common name Yasuke. One early source suggests he first studied under his elder brother Katsufusa before entering formal apprenticeship with Shinozaki Katsushige, a direct-line successor within the Mito *kinkō* tradition. From Tenpō 15 (1844) he served the domain as an officially appointed metal-carver (*goyō horimonoshi*), and was active as a leading figure among the Mito metalworkers through the final years of the shogunate and into the Meiji era. He trained many pupils, bestowing the character "Ya" (弥) from his own common name upon his disciples as a customary element in theirs; from his school emerged such celebrated craftsmen as Namekawa Sadakatsu and Unno Shōmin. His two sons, Katsuyasu and Katsuho, continued the metalworking lineage — the elder adopted into the Suzuki family, the younger succeeding to the Hagiya line. Katsuhira died in Meiji 19 (1886) at the age of eighty-three. Katsuhira's work is defined by the richly textural *takabori* (high-relief carving) for which he was especially renowned, executed with a deep and forceful chisel and enriched throughout by polychrome *iroe* (color metal inlay) employing gold, silver, *shakudō*, *shibuichi*, *oborogin*, and *hidō*. His compositions display a *Yokoya*-school flavor — the NBTHK observes that his manner of depicting lions "suggests that Katsuhira took Sōmin as a model" — yet are grounded firmly in the Mito metalworking idiom. He worked fluently across multiple ground treatments, from polished iron *migaki-ji* to *shibuichi* with *ishime-ji* (stone-texture ground) and *tsuchime-ji* (hammered ground), adapting surface texture to narrative purpose. His *shakudō nanako-ji* pieces, though "comparatively uncommon within Mito metalwork as a whole," demonstrate command of a technique more often associated with earlier traditions. Whether depicting *Hōjōe* crane-release scenes, the Aridōshi shrine from the *nō* repertoire, rain dragons, or Buddhist subjects such as Fugen and Monju, his figure carving is singled out for its vivid expressiveness — Yoritomo's "cool, refreshing expression suggesting an inner vigor" is noted as "a quality that can only be expected from a first-rate Mito metalworker." Across his oeuvre, *hira-zōgan* for textile patterns, minute "dew" inlay for sea spray, and *ko-sukashi* (small openwork) complement the dominant takabori to produce works of layered visual depth. The NBTHK consistently describes Katsuhira's output in terms of "compelling power and presence," "forceful vigor and technical refinement," and "an intense, forceful spirit" — language that positions him as a maker whose strength lay in muscular, richly worked compositions rather than restrained understatement. His works are repeatedly characterized as "meticulous and forceful," "exceptionally careful and deliberate," and "finished to an especially outstanding level even among the maker's works." The *menuki* depicting Fugen and Monju are said to convey "an elegant and richly full-bodied feeling, attaining a refined nobility," while his complete *koshirae* suites are held to "vividly display the consummate skill of Mito *tōsō* craftsmanship." Taken together, the designation records affirm Katsuhira as one of the foremost representatives of Mito metalwork — a master in whom the full abilities of the tradition were brought to bear.

Dealer

Iida Koendo

iidakoendo.com

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