A KINAI SCHOOL TSUBA

Details
A KINAI SCHOOL TSUBA
EDO PERIOD (CIRCA 1800), SIGNED ECHIZEN JU KINAI SAKU

The round iron plate is pierced with a design of saddle parts and a pair of stirrups (abumi). The design is carved realistically in the round. It is signed on the reverse--height and width 7.6cm., thickness 5mm.
Provenance
Garbutt collection
Glendining & Co., London, July 1965, lot 220.

Lot Essay

The Kinai school of Echizen province made tsuba from the early Edo period until the Meiji era. They lasted for six generations and were retainers of the Echizen daimyo. They signed presentation (kenjo) tsuba, as in this example, on the reverse. From the style of both the tsuba and the signature, this example can be attributed to the fourth generation Kinai master, who died in 1809.