kissakai Posted April 13, 2017 Report Posted April 13, 2017 I was wondering about the use the ‘ko’ for descriptions of tsuba schools There are the dates I’ve thought are somewhere near ko Katchushi = pre 1568 ko Shoami = pre 1568 ko Toshi = pre 1568 ko Umetada = pre 1568 Please amend as required While I’m at it what about these dates? ko Kinko = 1400 to 1600 I’ve never seem a description of ko Owari but more likely to be in ‘periods’ Owari 1st period =1500 As ko is defined as early school work I wondered why I don’t see these descriptions No ko Bushu No ko Choshu No ko Owari I often hear this term so I should know what it means Quote
johnnyi Posted April 13, 2017 Report Posted April 13, 2017 Hi Grev. Could it be that putting hard and fast dates on these might be sometimes misleading? By that I mean trying to distinguish an old tsuba, (for instance a ko-Tosho, which Robert Haynes speaks of in his Shibui Swords site as having certain distinguishable characturistics) from the next generation of that tsuba which has distinctly different characturistics? As an aside, the Ko-Shoami he describes as being made until the end of the Momoyama period which I guess again is attributing "ko" to characturistics of the old school moreso than exact date?. Just my 2-cents, It will be nice when the experts chime in on this, as I've wondered too. regards, Johnnyi Quote
kissakai Posted April 15, 2017 Author Report Posted April 15, 2017 Over 150 views with only one comment - strange as ko is such a commonly used term so there should be some reasoning behind it I think the Momoyama is a reasonable call as it precedes the Edo period and is quite a convenient date but being convenient is not a good reason The reason I asked was to increase my understanding of this term and some of my tsuba have been described as ko *** but are a later date than those without the prefix 'ko' If anyone has papered 'ko' tsuba that is dated or knows actual book references then this is a start otherwise why use an undefined term? 1 Quote
Pete Klein Posted April 15, 2017 Report Posted April 15, 2017 Pretty much all of this terminology goes back to Akiyama Kiyusaku and others who began the study of fittings in the nineteenth cantury. There is no single historic 'authority' as there is little to no written history on early fittings so it is mostly speculation at best. Placing the term, 'Ko' as referring to before Azuchi-Momoyama Jidai is about the best a generalization as we see utilized in descriptives. Ko Kinko, Ko Goto, Ko Umetada etc. fall into the same general definition. Suffice it to say it's just a guideline as these pieces were not signed or dated and therefore we can only assume the period of manufacture. Now then, having said this there are areas where the term is used loosely. Ko Goto can be used when an exact attribution to one of the first three/four mainline masters cannot be determined (such as to Joshin) but it is also used for work which is early and falls into the realm of the Goto makers design orthodoxy. Where not it would go to Ko Kinko or Ko Mino 'schools' which here is used loosely to refer to a design concept rather than a specific group of aligned artists. Most of the later 'schools' (Busho, Choshu, Echizen etc.) started around or after 1568 so you won't see 'Ko' utilized. Ko is also not used with Kanayama but an attribution can be modified with a time descriptive such as 'shoki (early) Edo' which is also used with Owari and others in an attempt to specify an approximate time of manufacture. Early Kyo Sukashi in the past were sometimes referred to as 'Heianjo Sukashi' but this isn't seen much in current attributions. The bottom line is that you have to spend about ten years in study to make some sense of the classifications as there is no 'rule book' to refer to. This is where science, artistic history and wishful thinking tend to collide and the wreck can sometimes be a bit messy. 10 Quote
kissakai Posted April 15, 2017 Author Report Posted April 15, 2017 Thanks Pete My concern was that it is a term quite freely used and as such I would have thought there was a more defined definition so your reply has helped me Grev UK Quote
sabi Posted April 26, 2017 Report Posted April 26, 2017 Great post by Pete, and to drive his point in a bit further we also have Ko-Akasaka, which refers to the first three generations. However, they aren't "ko" in the pre-Momoyama sense as they span from the early to late 1600's. So in this case it's more of a literal tag, early Akasaka. Quote
Pete Klein Posted April 26, 2017 Report Posted April 26, 2017 Evan -- Yes! Absolutely correct. There is some speculation that the earliest Akasaka were actually from Owari and then the school was moved to Edo due to the shogunate relocation. I haven't read anything on this recently but it is of course a possibility. It's sort of funny how a society which pretty much wrote down everything missed practically this entire field. Oh well... 2 Quote
kissakai Posted April 30, 2017 Author Report Posted April 30, 2017 I've just come back from a holiday so just reading a couple more replies - thanks I still find it strange that such a common term is a bit like sea cucumber!!!!! Quote
sabi Posted May 1, 2017 Report Posted May 1, 2017 Evan -- Yes! Absolutely correct. There is some speculation that the earliest Akasaka were actually from Owari and then the school was moved to Edo due to the shogunate relocation. I haven't read anything on this recently but it is of course a possibility. It's sort of funny how a society which pretty much wrote down everything missed practically this entire field. Oh well... Pete - I've read a bit on that and it certainly seems plausible. There are clear similarities between Owari sukashi and the work of the ko Akasaka masters, specifically the first two IMO. A shame indeed that so much information has been lost to time! I would also like to correct my earlier post, as ko Akasaka theoretically extends into the 18th century. The third master, Tadatora, has a death date listed as 1704. Quote
Curran Posted May 1, 2017 Report Posted May 1, 2017 To add to the mix: "Proto-Akasaka" exist, where they scream Akasaka, but date earlier and often show a heavier influence of Owari and/or Kyo-sukashi influence. Reluctantly I sold my "proto" in my minimalist pursuit to only own 12 keeper tsuba [can never seem to get below lucky 13, and have 15 at present]. The NBTHK just said "Ko-Akasaka" on that one. I would date it to somewhere between 1601 and 1625. To add to Grev's list, I've seen "Ko-Myochin" NBTHK Hozon papers before. Terms like "Ko-Hagi" or "Hagi" tsuba often preempt certain periods, meaning you are unlikely to find the term "Ko-Choshu" on NBTHK papers. But it may exist. To date, I've only seen one NBTHK Hozon attribution to "Ainu"- but they exist. Rarer than hen's teeth. "Ko-Choshu" might exist out there somewhere? Quote
kissakai Posted May 1, 2017 Author Report Posted May 1, 2017 Hi Nice feedback that I've summed up and added a bit more so it may be a 'starter for ten' Sasano states ko Tosho and ko Katchushi as 1550 1600. Ko-Shoami, Ko Kinko, Ko Goto and Ko Umetada ko Akasaka 1700 An NBTHK paper said "Ko-Akasaka" and I would date it to somewhere between 1601 and 1625. I've seen "Ko-Myochin" NBTHK with Hozon papers. "Ko-Hagi - no one has suggested a date Busho, Choshu, Echizen etc. started around or after 1568 so you won't see 'Ko' utilized. Ko is also not used with Kanayama From my own collection I have these 'ko' definitions but I may re-title them after this post: ko Shoami - 1750 ko kinko - 1600 ko Umetada - 1700 ko sukashi - 1800 Does anyone have papers with 'ko' in the description otherwise this may be the end of this post? Quote
MauroP Posted May 1, 2017 Report Posted May 1, 2017 Hi Grev, I've collected images (not real tsuba, unfortunately) of 925 NBTHK papered tsuba. Among them I can see: 9 ko-tōshō, 7 ko-katchūshi, 23 ko-kinkō, 12 ko-Shōami. 4 ko-Akasaka. Never seen papers reporting ko-Goto, ko-Mino, ko-Myōchin, ko-Umetada and ko-Nara. My records can be biased in some way, but can give a rough estimate of the relative frequencies (at least of what deserve certification according to the NBTHK panels). BTW, ko-sukashi has a complete different meaning (and is written 小透, not 古透).Bye, Mauro Quote
Curran Posted May 1, 2017 Report Posted May 1, 2017 Ko- Myochin: The tsuba is already sold, so no images of the Hozon papers. http://www.tsubanomiyako.jp/SHOP/TS-330.html There was another labeled ko-Myochin sold via Choshuya.com a while back. Ko-Mino: It was easiest to link to the TH one Fred W. had up for sale, but it seems gone now. I can scan in one of mine, if necessary. Ko-Goto: well, the Goto supposedly didn't make tsuba until Gen 5 (Tokujo), so I don't think you will see 'Ko-Goto' on tsuba papers. That might explain Mauro's not having come across any. However, ko-goto as an NBTHK attribution is rather common enough on other fittings. Here is an easy example: http://www.seiyudo.com/me-020314.htm Ko-Umetada: I don't know of any up for sale at the moment. I think the last papered one I saw was on Choshuya. Ko-Nara: I don't think I've seen such papers. Ko-Hagi or Hagi I think is just shorthand or misnomer for tsuba supposedly early Choshu. I think that is from Torigoye-Haynes, but may be from Watson's translation of Nihonto Koza. [Mauro is clearly right about the 小透 with the ko meaning 'small'. Not the 古 meaning 'old'.] Other than 'ko-akasaka' most any tsuba we see with an NBTHK attribution of 古 before the name is going to generally mean Momoyama or earlier. No? Quote
kissakai Posted May 2, 2017 Author Report Posted May 2, 2017 Mauro Do the papers you have access to roughly comply with my dates Nice to get an idea of which types are not papered although I was surprised about ko Goto but obviously the data is from a limited resource hence the papers request from NMB members that has a huge following My ko Umetada was defined by Robert Haynes but I understand that definitions are always evolving Schoolboy error about the ko in sukashi - thanks Quote
kissakai Posted February 25, 2018 Author Report Posted February 25, 2018 Hi I was revisiting the ko term As ko is used on some papers there should be defined dates Looking back on this post and adding in a couple of other references I wonder if there is any more to be gleaned or is the post dead? Why the fixation on 'ko'? As ko is used on some papers there should be defined dates It is so often I'd like to understand it better ko can be a desirable and definable description Who hasn't used the term? From Tsuba An Aesthetic Study, Torigoye and Haynes ko Nara were said by Kuwabara be be before the 3rd generation so around 1650 ko Shoami - 1600 ko kinko - 1600 ko Umetada - 1700 ko Nara – 1650 ko Akasaka – 1625 from unknown papers ko Tosho – 1550 ko Katchushi - 1550 Sasano states ko Tosho and ko Katchushi as 1550 Not found Ko Hagi I've seen Ko Myochin with NBTHK with Hozon papers. From a NM member I've collected images (not real tsuba, unfortunately) of 925 NBTHK papered tsuba. Among them I can see: ko Tosho = 9 ko Katchushi = 7 ko Kinko = 23 ko Shoami = 12 ko Akasaka = 4 No ko prefix used Busho, Choshu, Echizen, Kanayama Grev Quote
John A Stuart Posted February 25, 2018 Report Posted February 25, 2018 It may depend on specific scholars opinion where early is in relation to the span of the type. Rigid time points just beg for exceptions, don't they? Even within the lifetime range of one specific artist there is an early, 早 ko-. period and a later, 後 ato-, period. If you were to have an early Bushu tsuba, who would gainsay your use of ko-Bushu? John Quote
kissakai Posted February 25, 2018 Author Report Posted February 25, 2018 There was known fighting art of Basho and someone had to make their fighting equipment! Quote
Jean Posted February 25, 2018 Report Posted February 25, 2018 Why not say: Ko means early or before, instead of trying to do it as western people, meaning putting everything in nice square boxes. Dates in tsuba are very « flexible », unlike daito, they were rarely dated (I have never seen one) and they were more often unsigned.... 2 Quote
kissakai Posted February 25, 2018 Author Report Posted February 25, 2018 I understand these comments re pigeonholing but if I see Edo on papers I know the date range If some papers say ko Tosho then it is not 1600 but may pre 1550 There must be rules/guidelines for ko that the Shinsa team use If it was not important them it would be used! Sometimes terms are frequently used but maybe not understood Quote
Jean Posted February 25, 2018 Report Posted February 25, 2018 Grev, Don’t you think that if it was as simple, it would have already been put in chart by Japanese kodogu experts? Quote
Henry Wilson Posted February 25, 2018 Report Posted February 25, 2018 I have a tsuba papered to Ko Kagamishi by the NBTHK. This is an unusual classification and seems to denote that it is pre Muromachi. Quote
kissakai Posted February 26, 2018 Author Report Posted February 26, 2018 Hi Jean I think we just have to accept our different views I know the term is unlikely to be documented but t may be partially done using references already known such as books and papers Henry: Kagamishi was out of the blue - nice one and is along the lines of 'Sasano states ko Tosho and ko Katchushi as 1550' I still think I will use the listing above and add in ko Kagamishi unless anyone has a counter argument Grev Quote
Jussi Ekholm Posted February 26, 2018 Report Posted February 26, 2018 I am not a tsuba guy and the following periods are presented by Fukushi Shigeo and taken from Tosogu Classroom vol.1 Ko-Tōshō - until end of Muromachi Ko-Katchūshi - until end of Muromachi Ko-Kinkō - from late Nanbokuchō / early Muromachi to until early Edo? Ko-Shōami - until end of Momoyama? Ko-Hagi - from end of Muromachi until early Edo Ko-Akasaka - Refers to first three generations, and sometimes early Akasaka tsuba in general - According to dates from Akasaka Tsuba Yuisho from Kan'ei until Hōei c. 1624 - 1711 Shigeo did not use ko prefix for old tsuba like Heianjō-sukashi or Kanayama For example about Kanayama he states that earliest ones are most likely from Ōei and youngest ones around Tenshō. For Heianjō-sukashi he gives time frame of around 170 years about Eikyō to Bunroku I also have the Iron tsuba book by Japanese Sword Museum, it has these descriptions Ko-Tōshō - made before Keicho period Ko-Katchūshi - made before Keicho period Ko-Shōami - until early Edo? (I didn't totally understand the English description) 4 Quote
kissakai Posted February 26, 2018 Author Report Posted February 26, 2018 Well that helps a lot - thanks Jussi Quote
kissakai Posted February 27, 2018 Author Report Posted February 27, 2018 I have (assuming I've note messed up) my interpretation of these posts Reference data from: Tsuba An Aesthetic Study, Torigoye and Haynes ko Nara were said by Kuwabara be be before the 3rd generation so around 1650 Fukushi Shigeo from the Tosogu Classroom vol.1 Tsuba book by the Japanese Sword Museum Shigeo books Sasano states ko Tosho and ko Katchushi as 1550 ko Katchushi pre 1550 ko Tosho pre 1550 ko Hagi pre 1600 ko kinko pre 1600 ko Shoami pre 1600 ko Nara pre 1650 ko Akasaka pre 1700 ko Umetada pre 1700 No ko prefix used for: Bushu, Choshu, Echizen, Kanayama, Heianjo sukashi and Myochin Kanayama period 1400 to 1600 Heianjo sukashi 1450 to 1600 I've enjoyed this discussion and it still surprises me the knowledge that is available from the NMB These are some terms like ko Nara that are of only academic interest and I don't think it is a term I'd used What I am glad to define is ko Katchushi and Tosho, Katchushi and Tosho and by deduction revivalist Katchushi and Tosho Also glad to add or remove the ko Shoami label Many thanks Grev Quote
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