Details
A NARA SCHOOL TSUBA
EDO PERIOD (CIRCA 1700)

The oval iron plate is well-hammered and punched to create the appearance of a rock face. It is inlaid in gold, silver and shibuichi with an ivy vine on both sides. The hitsu-ana are lined with shakudo (sekigane)--height 7.1cm., width 6.8cm., thickness 5.25mm.

Lot Essay

This is a classic example of a Nara school tsuba. Here Nara does not refer to the old capital city of Nara, but to a family of artists, the kanji being the same for both. The family worked in the late Muromachi period (around 1550) and was still making tsuba at the end of the Edo period (1550-1850).

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