A Soshu Katana
A Soshu Katana

UNSIGNED, ATTRIBUTED TO SA HIROYASU, NANBOKUCHO PERIOD (14TH CENTURY)

细节
A Soshu Katana
Unsigned, attributed to Sa Hiroyasu, Nanbokucho period (14th century)
Sugata [configuration]: honzukuri, iori-mune shallow toriizori, o-kissaki
Kitae [forging pattern]: o-itame with light jinie, midare utsuri
Hamon [tempering pattern]: choji of nie with ashi, yo, kinsuji, inazuma, togariba, kuchigaiba
Boshi [tip]: ko-maru with hakikake
Horimono [carving]: bohi on both sides
Nakago [tang]: o-suriage, two holes
Habaki [collar]: double, gilt copper
In shirasaya [plain wood scabbard] with attribution to Sa Hiroyasu
Nagasa [length from tip to beginning of tang]: 70cm.
Sori [curvature]: 1.3cm.
Motohaba [width at start of tempered edge]: 3.2cm.
Sakihaba [width before tip]: 2.5cm.

拍品专文

The registration document attributes the blade to Hiroyasu, and states that it was in the old collection of Sakamoto Itaru. Old documents tell that Hiroyasu was a pupil of the first Samonji who had studied under Masamune. Other contemporary smiths in Chikuzen include Yasuyuki, Yoshisada, Yoshihiro, Yukihiro, and Yasuyoshi, and some of these signatures are found on later work of the Muromachi period. The swords of the school are distinctive, with a fine hada rich in jinie, often mixed with a larger flowing hada, and a bright hamon of suguha with complex variations of midare and gunome. The boshi is typically rather pointed with straight angled return, often with hakikake. Since the tachi of the period are invariably cut-down, the signatures are lost, and it is difficult to distinguish between the different smiths.