Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 7.djvu/469

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CHISELLERS

  • Mitsunori. Goto. 1860. Seventeenth representative of the Goto family. Called Tenjō. Died 1879. The last of the Goto experts. Yedo.
  • Mitsunori. Goto. 1760. Kyoto.
  • Mitsunori. Goto. 1680. Kyoto.
  • Mitsunori. Vide Keijo.
  • Mitsunori. Goto. 1670. Kyoto.
  • Mitsunori. Vide Joren.
  • Mitsunori. Vide Zenjō.
  • Mitsuoki. Goto. 1680. Kyoto.
  • Mitsusada. Vide Renjō.
  • Mitsusada. Murakami. 1750. Todayu. Toyama.
  • Mitsusada. 1720. Iyemon. A pupil of Sōmin.
  • Mitsusato. Goto. 1610. One of the three Mino-bori (vide Kakujō). Celebrated for deeply chiselled landscapes. Mino.
  • Mitsusato. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo.
  • Mitsushige. Vide Sokujō.
  • Mitsushima. Goto. 1660. Shichizayemon. Kyoto.
  • Mitsushiro. Otsuki. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo.
  • Mitsusuke. Goto. 1670. Kyoto.
  • Mitsutada. Goto. 1610. Kyoto.
  • Mitsutada. Vide Kiujō.
  • Mitsutaka. Vide Yenjo.
  • Mitsutaka. Saito. 1830. Ginzō. Pupil of Teramitsu (Omori). Sendai.
  • Mitsutaka. Morimura. 1840. A highly skilled expert of Yedo. Celebrated for chiselling insects.
  • Mitsutaka. Vide Shūjō.
  • Mitsutake. Goto. 1640. Kyoto.
  • Mitsutaki. Kikuoka. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo. Art name, Kinkōdō.
  • Mitsutatsu. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo. Art name, Ichijiu-sai.
  • Mitsutatsu. Omori. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo.
  • Mitsuteru. Mikami. 1730. A pupil of Yanagawa Naomitsu. Yedo.
  • Mitsutoki. Kakinuma. 1830. Shinzō. A pupil of Terumitsu (Omori). Yedo.
  • Mitsutomi. Vide Injō.
  • Mitsutomo. Vide Renjō.
  • Mitsutomo. Goto. 1720. Rihei. Kyoto.
  • Mitsutomo. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo.
  • Mitsutoshi. Vide Kwanjō.
  • Mitsutoshi. Kikuoka. 19th cent. Metal-worker of Yedo.
  • Mitsutoshi. Vide Tsūjō.
  • Mitsutoyo. Vide Shūjō.
  • Mitsutoyo. Vide Shūjō and Kambei.
  • Mitsutsugu. Yoshioka. 1740. Kayemon or Munehiro. Yedo.
  • Mitsutsuke. Goto. 1760. Kyoto.
  • Mitsutsuna. Vide Kaijō.
  • Mitsutsune. Otsuki. 1750. Yamashiro-ya Kihachi. Said to be the nineteenth in descent from Kwōrin. Kyoto.
  • Mitsutsune. Nakai. 1590. Founder of the well-known family of Hagi (vide Nobutsune) guard-makers. Frequently used the mark Jokan Inshi. Suwo.
  • Mitsutsune. Nakai. 1390. The founder of the Nakai family. He worked at Suwo in Yamaguchi, and his art name was Sakan Inshi.
  • Mitsuyori. Vide Ritsujō.
  • Mitsuyori. Murata. 1760. Hanjiro. Called also Kōzui. Used the mark Ichiyodo. Yedo.
  • Mitsuyoshi. Goto. 1830. Fifteenth representative of the Goto family. Called Shinjō. Yedo. Art name, Shintoken.
  • Mitsuyoshi. Nishimura. 1750. Sasaya Genzuki. A good expert pupil of Mitsutsune (Otsuki). Kyoto.
  • Mitsuyoshi. Vide Joken.
  • Mitsuyoshi. Vide Genjō.
  • Mitsuyoshi. Tachibana. 1840. A skilled expert of Yedo. Art name, Shōjō, indicating his love of wine.
  • Mitsuyuki. Vide Unjō.
  • Mitsuyuki. Kikuoka. 1760. Ritōji. Called himself Dopposai and Saikaan, which names are found on his works. A pupil of Yanagawa Naomitsu, and an expert of the highest order. He carved in the Yokoya style, and Japanese connoisseurs, speaking of the delicacy and strength of his chiselling, say that it resembles feather-grass drooping heavy with dew, but not touching the ground. Yedo.
  • Mitsuyuki. Goto. 1680. Kyoto.
  • Mitsuzane. Vide Rinjō.
  • Miyasaka. Yoshimasa. Present day. Metal-sculptor. Pupil of Unno Shōmin.
  • Miyōchin. Family of armourers and workers in metal. The genealogy of the family extends back to the second century of the Christian era,

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