
Sword Guard (<i>Tsuba</i>) Depicting Iris in Running Water (水辺の杜若図鐔)
An item at Metropolitan Museum of Art
This tsuba shows two irises in three dimensional openwork whose blossoms are highlighted in gold and whose leaves are forming for the most part the rim of the tsuba. Towards the bottom right we see running water. The combination of irises and running water often alludes to one chapter in the Ise Monogatari (伊勢物語), a collection of poems that dates back to the 10th century. The chapter in question introduces a nobleman who rests beside an eight-planked bridge in the famous iris marshes of Mikawa province. He composes a poem in which longs for his home, the artistocratic capital of Kyōto, but in particular for his wife that he misses: “I have a beloved wife, familiar as the skirt of a well-worn robe, and so this distant journying fills my heart with grief." (Richard Bowring, The Ise Monogatari: A Short Cultural History; Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, Vol. 52, No. 2 Dec., 1992) The first syllables of each line of the poem, ka-ki-tsu-ba-ta, form the Japanese word for iris.
Arms and Armor
An exhibit at Metropolitan Museum of Art
The principal goals of the Arms and Armor Department are to collect, preserve, research, publish, and exhibit distinguished examples representing the art of the armorer, swordsmith, and gunmaker. Arms and armor have been a vital part of virtually all cultures for thousands of years, pivotal not only in conquest and defense, but also in court pageantry and ceremonial events. Throughout time the best armor and weapons have represented the highest artistic and technical capabilities of the society and period in which they were made, forming a unique aspect of both art history and material culture.