Description

This is a wakizashi by Kanefusa from the mid to late Muromachi period. The blade features a powerful gomabashi on the front and a koshi-hi and soe-hi on the back. The hamon is based on a bright and clear gunome-midare, incorporating the "Kanefusa-midare" pattern, and is further tempered into a full temper. The blade is in excellent condition and the forging is outstanding.

兼房 - Kanefusa - 3-916
Tokuho

兼房 - Kanefusa - 3-916

Wakizashi

¥1,650,000

Tracked across 81 dealers worldwide · price history · sold archive

Specifications

Nagasa

31 cm

Sori

0.6 cm

Motohaba

3.11 cm

Sakihaba

2.81 cm

About the maker

Seki Kanefusa兼房

1 Tokubetsu Jūyō6 Jūyō Tōken

Kanefusa is among the best-known smiths of the Mino tradition in the Muromachi period, working from the town of Seki in Noshu. According to sword-signature reference works, his origins lie with the Akasaka smiths, and the first generation is considered to have been Shigefusa, active around the Kakitsu era (1441-1444). The name continued under successive generations from the mid-Muromachi period into the *shinto* era. Among extant dated works, examples are recorded from the Bunmei, Tenbun, Eiroku, and Tensho eras, with the greatest number of surviving pieces — including those bearing two-character signatures — dating from approximately Eiroku through Tensho. Most long-signature examples are cut "Noshu Seki-ju," confirming that the smith resided in Seki. Kanefusa is particularly famed for having devised the temper pattern known as "Kanefusa *midare*" (also termed *Kenbo midare*), an idiosyncratic *gunome-choji* whose heads are rounded and whose waists constrict. Beyond this signature style, works also appear in *notare* and in *sanbonsugi-midare* in the manner of Kanemoto, demonstrating a broad range of expression. The forging typically shows *itame-hada* with a tendency toward *nagare*, accompanied by *ji-nie* and an overall *shirake-gokoro* — a whitish cast characteristic of Mino workmanship. The *nioiguchi* tends toward tightness with *ko-nie* adhering, and finer examples display *tobiyaki* and *muneyaki* interspersed throughout, producing a varied and lively temper. The bold, vigorous style associated with later Mino workmanship is consistently evident. Kanefusa's best works are praised by the NBTHK as notably vigorous and full of spirited force, with ample *nikuoki* and robust overall shape deemed particularly pleasing. Blades in sound condition are recognized as *kenzen*, with both *ji* and *ha* well executed. The flamboyant expression of the distinctive *midare*, combined with wide *mihaba* and *o-kissaki*, produces an imposing *sugata* of dignified presence. Several designated examples also bear gold-inlaid cutting-test inscriptions of considerable documentary value, attesting to the practical esteem in which these blades were held during the Edo period.

Dealer

Toushin

shop.nihontou.jp

¥1,650,000

View on Toushin