Tsuba made of iron. Relief carved silver and gold inlay depicting sennin (possibly Kanzan) standing under a tree by the water, indicating the moon with his right hand. On the other side is a landscape with a group of trees by the water and migratory wild geese.
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.