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Posted

i realized a while back that over the last few years I have bought a few swords that have sayagaki by the famous Kanzan Sato a leading expert on swords and cofounder of the NBTHK after the war.   I thought that I would share a few photos of the sayagaki and hopefully start a conversation about Sato sensei, who played a key role in saving Japanese swords from certain destruction at that time.    

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Posted

Thank you very much, it was kind to mention... I have to say that the reason I place so many articles on Japanese topics on my sites is because it is a current ongoing learning process, versus medieval Islamic or Caucasian, where earlier articles where already summarized in the last two books.

 

Back to subject, from my database of auctions (which has some issues), from the total number of sayagaki:

 

46% by Dr. Kanzan Sato

9% by Tanobe Michihiro

3% by Dr. Honma Junji

 

Among others Honami Nishu and Honami Koson are strongly represented.

There is correlation with paper level. 

For example, I guess there was significant recent shift in Muramasa appraisal, so significant chunk of Dr. Sato sayagaki to him has green papers.

Honami Nishu has a correlation to the smallest overall percentage of recent papers. 

 

Kirill R.

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Posted

Hi Kiril, could you please elaborate on your statistical inferences about correlation coefficients and dependencies? I am not following the statistical / mathematical logic here. Thank you.

 

My own observation is that Tanobe sensei is somewhat selective about the blades for which he writes sayagaki. He tends to write sayagaki for higher quality blades (at least Tokubetsu Hozon) or for those unpapered blades which he knows are easy Juyo bets by virtue of quality or rarity or both.

 

In contrast, Sato sensei seems to have been more prolific in his sayagaki and some of the blades for which he wrote sayagaki might not surpass the Hozon criteria today. That was the case with one of my Muramasa blades, which had his sayagaki and was able of qualifying only for Hozon. I could not get to TokuHo as it was a bit polished down and the mei was partially obscured. So, despite the importance of the smith, they said that it being a Muromachi period blade it would not qualify for TokuHo on the basis of impacted mei (and probably what remained of the blade).

Regardless, the blade was a textbook Muramasa and Sato sensei’s opinion was obviously accurate and upheld by the NBTHK.

Posted

A couple more Kanzan sayagaki,

A su-yari by Kunisuke  and a Shinshinto katana by Shiroishi Sadatoshi - Sato sensei wrote them for me and - unfortunately I saw him write "Shirakawa" rather than Shiroishi. But I didn't think it was my place to call him on this, ahhh, matter.

Peter

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Posted

Kiril, 

 

What a good and nuanced writeup on your site. A pleasure to read. 

 

I second Michael's questions, and I think you're on the right track. My speculations as to the social dynamics at play in this time are as follow: 

 

Junji: Took requests and sourced elite blades for top collectors and museums, such as the Museum of Sword fittings.  

Sato: Took requests from each and everyone in a mission to popularize and 'open up to the public' the Japanese sword.

 

Tanobe came later and took the middle path - not as liberal as Sato, not as elite as Junji, and more verbose than anyone that came before. 

 

I will add that it is interesting to note that Sato's demise and subsequent power vacuum may have triggered the reveal of the scandals and misgivings in the local branch. He could have been the lid on the pot. I would be tempted to further speculate that Sato's attributions were liberal on the level of Honami Koson, who initiated the path of broadening the audience of Nihonto. 

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Posted

Thank you!

Its hard for me to claim expertise on the intent and procedure that was in place, since unlike Andy Quirt and quite a few older generation's representatives I was not there.

All I can observe right now is being on the receiving end of these opinions.

 

I feel that they were somewhat popular in the interwar period, since that was how the blades were judged - and most of those are kind of worthless today unless they provide a direct provenance to older collection. Basically even the most experienced people at the time had limited access to top blades and were dominated by pre-Meiji appraisals, so the opinions can be random.

 

The desire for sayagaki truly awoke again only in the late 60s, when blade market was beginning to strive, and for some reason probably more so than now it was felt that green papers are not enough, so a lot of blades were given a sayagaki.

Honami Nishu at best worked with questionable ko-mihara Juyos from 21-27th sessions, and almost half of his sayagaki will not paper today the same. Appraisals sort of close, but substantially different, for example what papers as Edo Sendai sayagakied to Yamato Hosho.

It seems he was the person to be contacted till late 80s about things that were raising eyebrows.

 

Dr. Honma Junji basically wrote sayagaki for blades like those published in the register of Daimyo treasures, which for some collectors kind of what needs to be collected. His appraisals are very seldom overturned, but they also have quite a few nuances to them. 

Dr. Sato wrote a very substantial portion of the total number of sayagaki. It might be that especially with the top names any papers were still not getting acceptance by themselves, so sayagaki was considered a must and he was the person to be asked.

I think with some specific attributions like Muramasa there is a substantial chance that today's judgement standards will not confirm his appraisal - but it is just my personal observation. He also often gave benefit of the doubt to a traditional attribution, if it already existed. It does not go outside of realm of reasonable possibility, but there are cases when you get his sayagaki and green papers to say Sadamune and today it comes out as Shizu Kaneuji.

 

Kirill R.

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Posted

Since we seem to combe back to subject of forgeries, horrors and problematic sayagaki, here is one.

 

Original Kunzan's sayagaki with a substituted, probably Edo copy, of Hasebe blade in hitatsura. Actually the copy is very good, except the hada is a dead giveaway, being featureless tight itame.

 

Kirill R.

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Posted

Kirill, I'm curious.  That blade is pictured in the attached book page.  Is it stated to be shoshin in the book or does the book use it as an example of gimei? 

Posted

Thanks for the information on sayagaki Darcy.  

 

I have saved all of the old shirasaya with sayagaki from my blades.  One of them has what looks like a traditional honami sayagaki with price listed in gold pieces but which isn't signed by honami.  Can you comment on these?  Is the script of the honami identical and can it be worked out or if it lacks a signature does it mean that it was done by someone other than a honami, such as a merchant or other appraiser that wants to connect a price to a blade?  

Posted

Kirill, I'm curious.  That blade is pictured in the attached book page.  Is it stated to be shoshin in the book or does the book use it as an example of gimei? 

 

The one in the book is original, authentic Hasebe for which sayagaki was originally ordered.

I feel it is kind of rare situation I guess where the piece is actually copied rather than something is being created "in a general style of".

I actually wanted to buy the copy as well, but it did not work out.

 

Kirill R.

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