長船景光
Osafune Kagemitsu
Auch bekannt als: Kagemitsu; Pinnacle of Late Kamakura Osafune; Perfector of the Shimoban Tachi
Beschreibung
Bizen Osafune Kagemitsu is the grandson of Mitsutada and son of Nagamitsu — the third generation of the most celebrated lineage in Japanese sword history, working at the very end of the Kamakura period. He is famous for perfecting the 'ko-kissaki' (small point) tachi aesthetic of the late Kamakura era: slim, elegantly tapering blades with a refined, needle-like tip that embody the refined aesthetic ideal of the final Kamakura generation before the cataclysm of the Nanbokuchō wars. His surviving long-inscribed blades, dated precisely, provide crucial benchmarks for understanding the evolution of Bizen style across the period. A refiner by temperament rather than an expander, Kagemitsu selected the most elegant aspects of his father's broad output and elevated them to a new height of formal purity. Multiple National Treasures.
Legenden & Geschichten
Kagemitsu worked at the precise historical moment when the Kamakura period's refined aesthetic was about to be swept away by the chaos of the Nanbokuchō wars. His small-pointed, elegantly tapered tachi represent the final, most perfect expression of the Kamakura ideal before the southern and northern courts' armies demanded the big-bladed, wide-tipped swords of the next generation. There is a quality in late Kamakura art — a hyper-refinement that sometimes appears in traditions approaching their end — that Kagemitsu embodies perfectly. His precisely dated long inscriptions, rare in their era, show a craftsman's self-conscious awareness of making something worth preserving for posterity. Seven centuries later, those inscriptions are exactly what allow scholars to track the evolution of Bizen style across the period — Kagemitsu's intended legacy, fully realized.