| | | 09.02.2022 | |
| THE BEAUTY OF IMPERFECTION | For several years, the furniture in my house has been picked up for free at curbside giveaways. There’s a special pride that comes with my “cheap” décor. Pride in the story. In the uniqueness. And in my resourcefulness.
There’s also shame in the fact that this “look” — this shoddy, worn-down furniture — is the result of not being able to afford something “better.”
All my lamp shades are crooked. You can tell this bookshelf is the wooden base of a construction sign, leant against the wall. That other bookshelf is an old bed frame with shelves added to it. There’s a beautiful tea table with a design that keeps chipping away.
Today wabi-sabi is known in the West as a popular trend in style and interior design, yet it originally drew on Chinese Confucianism and Japanese Taoism as a defiant response to elite materialism.
The Japanese elites of the 15th and 16th centuries loved ornate tea ceremonies. Delicate pottery was celebrated for the prestige of its foreign designers. That was the trend until Murata Shuko, a Zen monk, purposely opposed the materialism of the fashionable tea ceremony by using local, understated, and worn or cracked utensils in his ceremonies. Eventually, wabi-sabi tea houses became fashionable.
Wabi-sabi is now known as a design trend akin to hygge or minimalism. But the essence of its appeal lies in what cannot be bought or mass produced. These articles explore the origin and philosophy of what Leonard Koren called “the most conspicuous and characteristic feature of traditional Japanese beauty.” May they help you find beauty in the imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete.
—Sandra Hannebohm, A/V Producer, Lion’s Roar |
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