Tsuba made from shakudō. For Nanaku. Two butterflies in relief, whose lower wings are folded on the back side, one engraved in gold, the other made of shakudō featuring mother-of-pearl eyes on the wings, with a golden body and feelers.

Featured on PDR in the collection Photographs of Japanese Sword Guards (1916)

In the mid-1890s, after health problems forced him to give up landscape painting, Georg Oeder (b. Aachen, Germany, 1846) threw himself into collecting Japanese art and artifacts — above all ukiyo-e prints and sword guards (tsuba). His collection of tsuba, which was one of the most extensive in the world at the time, was photographed and printed in a catalogue published in 1916. This catalogue is now almost all that remains of Oeder’s collection, most of which was auctioned off or lost after his death in 1931.

Tsuba made from shakudō. Two butterflies in relief.

Artist

Date

1916

From

Japanische Stichblätter und Schwertzieraten


Underlying Rights

Public Domain Worldwide

Digital Rights

No Additional Rights

  • No associated rights statement on Internet Archive. However, source confirmed by email no additional rights.
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Image Size

600 x 628 Higher res available?

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