Is “change” good? I had this question after I went to a tea
bowl exhibition at Matsuzakaya Museum (http://www.matsuzakaya.co.jp/nagoya/museum/2011tyawan/index3.html). The exhibition was about the Japanese
domestic products from origin to contemporary pieces. You
can see the history of raku and Mino wares.
Most impressive piece for me was the raku tea bowl named “Kamuro” made by
Chojiro. It was very simple and rustic
without any decorations. The texture was
earthy and size is smaller than I thought. I could not imagine how perfectly this bowl
fits in the Rikyu’s tea room, Taian.
In the end of the exhibition, there was a
panel with a comment from Raku Kichizaemon XV.
I don’t remember the exact phrase, but he was saying something like “Tea
is enjoyed more casually and freely nowadays and will be that way in the
future. But, there won’t be the spirit of *Rikyu or **Wabi-Sabi there.” I was
shocked with his warning. I’ve been
thinking that enjoying tea casually is good thing, but it might not be totally
correct. I find his products very distinctive,
and I thought he is a kind of person who is trying to create something new or
something different. But, he is actually
worried about our tea culture. I may need to learn from the past and create
new for the future.
*Rikyu: the most significant tea master in
the history who has perfected The Way of Tea
**wabi-sabi: Japanese beauty found in simplicity and rusticity.
































