長船景光
Osafune Kagemitsu
別名: Kagemitsu; Pinnacle of Late Kamakura Osafune; Perfector of the Shimoban Tachi
解說
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.
逸話與傳說
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.