Beater Posted June 27, 2019 Report Posted June 27, 2019 Having had my eye on this one for quite some some, I finally took the plunge. The seller had it down as late Edo period. Signed Issai Saku and that the maker also went by the name of Tsuchiya Takechika. (No reference as to where this info came from.) I believe Takechika is a fairly respected maker from the Naga school? It is in fact signed, "Hagi (no) ju ? Issai saku". There was a hand-written note under the cushion in the tsuba box, which suggests the missing kanji could be "Shi"? A friend (with more reference books than me) informed me that he found a few Issai tsuba-makers but none from Hagi or indeed Choshu. I understand the landscape depicted is the island of the distant mountain of immortality - a popular Chinese Daoist theme? Can anyone confirm the translation and is there any information known about this maker please? Many thanks in anticipation. Kevin. 1 Quote
ROKUJURO Posted June 27, 2019 Report Posted June 27, 2019 https://collections.mfa.org/objects/11879Reference for the famous TSUCHIYA TAKECHIKA Looks different. 1 Quote
Tanto54 Posted June 28, 2019 Report Posted June 28, 2019 Hi Kevin, I can confirm that the theme is Mount Hōrai (Mount Penglai) based on the shape of the gate at the base of the stairs. Quote
TETSUGENDO Posted June 28, 2019 Report Posted June 28, 2019 Kevin, Jean and George have both given you accurate information. BTW, nice classic 'Chinese landscape' scene, enjoy! -S- Quote
Beater Posted June 28, 2019 Author Report Posted June 28, 2019 Thanks gents. Agreed - the example in Boston Museum of Fine Art by Takechika bears no resemblance of kanji style nor in general appearance of workmanship. It seems to be well carved, so hoping someone will know more about Issai and perhaps another example by him is known? Kind regards, Kevin. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.