Shoami

Shoami

Shoami (or "Ko-Shoami") is a name of artistic school (style) for making sword-guards (tsuba), mounted on a Japanese sword ("uchi-gatana" [Japanese Sword Fighting: Secrets of the Samurai by Masaaki Hatsumi (2006) p.100] or just katana) [Samurai, Warfare and the State in Early Medieval Japan (Warfare and History) by Karl F. Friday (2003) p.79] [The Japanese Sword: A Comprehensive Guide (Japanese Arts Library) by Kanzan Sato (1997) p.159] . The sword-guard is one of the most important symbols of the samurai.

Etymology

The "ami" part of this name, which derives from the name of the Amida Buddha, was once used to indicate a rank among priests of a branch of Buddhism called Jishu. Later, after the founding of the Ashikaga shogunate, a number of men engaged in serving the shogunal house in artistic or technical capacities included this word in their names.

The demand

In the Muromachi period, samurai of high standing began to use the "uchi-gatana"; and as a result, outstanding guards for these weapons came into demand. Possibly the elevation of the status of the silver-smith to a position where he was entitled to use a name like Shoami dates from the time when craftsmen began producing fine sword guards of this kind. Naturally, as the popularity of the "uchi-gatana" increased, so did orders for them and for their guards. This in turn increased the number of people desiring to master the technique of guard design and production, since this field of endeavor promised prestige and reward. Apprentices to sword-guard makers must have grown in numbers, and probably feudal lords outside the capital invited these men to work for them.

Popularity

From the Muromachi period until the nineteenth-century edict prohibiting the carrying of swords, Shoami guards in a wide range of styles were being produced all over Japan. In fact, so numerous are the types of Shoami guards that it is even considered safe by some people to call anything unassignable to another group Shoami. Furthermore, although some Shoami guards produced for specific clients are of high quality, they were made in quantity to be treated as merchandise and sold as souvenirs of the capital city; and there is a tendency to regard Shoami guards generally as inferior.

Influence

Shoami guards had great influence on other schools of design and production. For example, Higo guards (produced in Higo Province), often called "the flower of sword guards," are closely connected with Shoami works. Such famous guard makers as Hirata Hikozo, Nishigaki Kanshiro, and Shimizu Jingo were trained in the Shoami style, and the Shoami influence is great in the works of Hayashi Matashichi and Miyamoto Musashi. Moreover a large number of Shoami sword guards easily pass as products of the more highly regarded Higo [The Arts of Japan: Late Medieval to Modern Vol.2 by Seiroku Noma and Glenn T. Webb (2003)] [Japan-British Exhibition, 1910 Shepherd's Bush, London: Fine Arts Catalogue. Part I.-British Section. Part II.-Japanese Section by Unknown Author (2002) p.246] , Kanayama, and Owari groups. For these reasons, Shoami guards deserve proper evaluation for their powerful influence and for their intrinsic merit as objects worthy of appreciation.

Aesthetics

The characteristic of the Shoami design is abundant movement with symmetry. The "seppa-dai" and the "hitsu-ana" for the "kozuka" and "kogai" are wide, giving the guards a slightly heavy appearance. Truly outstanding Shoami open-work guards are limited to Kyoto Shoami [Japanese Crafts: A Complete Guide to Today's Traditional Handmade Objects by Craft Forum Japan (2001) p.153] , and even among these the most valued are the Ko-Shoami, or old Shoami, from the Muromachi and Azuchi-Momoyama periods. Muro-machi-period Ko-Shoami guards have a style that falls between those of Kyo-sukashi and Owari. Those of the Momoyama period have elements in common with the style of Nishigaki of the Higo group.

See also

* katana
* Umetada
* saya
* Aesthetics
* History of decorative arts
* Toreutics

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Umetada — is said to have been used by silversmiths since the Muromachi period [The Japanese Sword: A Comprehensive Guide (Japanese Arts Library) by Kanzan Sato (1997)p.68] . But in the Momoyama period, a certain Umetada Myoju (1558 1631) [Discovering the… …   Wikipedia

  • Mokume-gane — Example of Mokume gane patterns in gold and silver alloys Mokume gane brass/copper billet Mokume gane ( …   Wikipedia

  • Toreutics — is the art of working metal, [Aesthetics: Lectures on Fine Art Volume II (Aesthetics) by G. W. F. Hegel and T. M. Knox (1998) p.161] [How to Understand Sculpture by Margaret Thomas, Kessinger Publishing, 2005, p.25] by hammering gold or silver… …   Wikipedia

  • Alfred Baur — (1865 1951) was born in Andelfingen, Switzerland, (Zurich). He attended school in Winterthur and joined a large international trading company which posted him in Colombo, Ceylon [A. Baur Co. Ltd: 100 years in Sri Lanka, 1897 1997 (1997)] . When… …   Wikipedia

  • Mokume-Gane — Damast Ring mit aufwendiger Musterung sowie fugenlos. Mokume Gane (jap. 木目金) ist eine Schmiedetechnik, die ihren Ursprung in Japan um 1600 hat. Je nach vorliegender Quelle kann auch ein Jahr um 1700 benannt sein, ausgehend von der Annahme, dass… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mokume Gane — Damast Ring mit aufwendiger Musterung sowie fugenlos. Mokume Gane (jap. 木目金) ist eine Schmiedetechnik, die ihren Ursprung in Japan um 1600 hat. Je nach vorliegender Quelle kann auch ein Jahr um 1700 benannt sein, ausgehend von der Annahme, dass… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mokume Gané — Mokume Gane Damast Ring mit aufwendiger Musterung sowie fugenlos. Mokume Gane (jap. 木目金) ist eine Schmiedetechnik, die ihren Ursprung in Japan um 1600 hat. Je nach vorliegender Quelle kann auch ein Jahr um 1700 benannt sein, ausgehend von der… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”