Have you heard the name, Sen no Rikyu? He is the
most significant tea master in the history who has perfected The Way of
Tea. He also designed tea rooms with his
distinctive aesthetic sense.
Konnichiwa, it’s Kohei. On our Kyoto
trip, we visited Myokian temple. It has
Tai-an that is the only existing tearoom confirmed as Rikyu’s design. Tai-an is one of the three tea rooms designated
as national treasure of Japan.
You cannot get inside the room but you can
view it from outside and see the inside from the windows and entrance. My impression of Tai-an is indeed very
rustic. The inside which is surrounded
with soil wall was dark and extremely small.
It is only two tatami-mat room.
The common size room at that time was 4.5 tatami mats. I wonder why he wanted to make the room so
small?
Maybe, the limited space and light make
people concentrate on the tea itself, or stimulate more mutual bonding
among the attendances. I’m not sure, but
I really want to experience a tea ceremony in this kind of space.
The monk at this temple told us that we can
find Rikyu’s designs on ceilings, windows and Tokonoma- alcove. Some of them are elaborately presented to
make the room look larger. Some people say
that it seems vast like the outer space.
But the monk said that it’s not that large. Two tatami mats are two tatami mats and
nothing more. Ha,ha,ha (^^;; Jah!























































