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BLU
Collage, 2003 |
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Wabi Sabi - a Japanese Cultural Aesthetic
Wabi Sabi, an aesthetic concept intimately related to Japan
and Zen Buddhism, is a way of perceiving things.
"...the Japanese cultural source of this
law of continual, cyclical evolution and decay parallels the
British cultural mood of determination, stubbornness and pride
which mandates a belief in improvement during times of hardship." (1)
Wabi Sabi is a aesthetic concept intimately related to Japan
and Zen Buddhism. However, it is not a "style of art" but
rather a way of perceiving things, a very refined culture of
things imperfect, impermanent and incomplete that expresses itself
in great freedom of form, sublime colors, and a simplicity. Things
of wabi-sabi nature are understated and unassuming, yet they
do have presence and quiet authority and describe the transience
and solitude of existence, an existential loneliness and tender
sadness, in short: the essence of Zen.
Wabi Sabi invites the viewer to appreciate of the minor details
of everyday life and gain insight into the beauty of the inconspicuous
and overlooked aspects of nature. Present-oriented and comfortable
with ambiguity and contradiction, imperfect simplicity takes
on new meaning as the basis for a new, pure beauty of organic
forms and personal, individual solutions.
Historically:
In the sixteenth-century the Japanese tea master and Zen monk,
Sen no Rikyu introduced the concept of Wabi Sabi. The following
little anecdote is known about him:
"Sen no Rikyu desired to learn The Way of Tea. He visited
the Tea Master, Takeno Joo. Joo ordered Rikyu to tend the garden.
Eagerly Rikyu set to work. He raked the garden until the ground
was in perfect order. When he had finished he surveyed his work.
He then shook the cherry tree, causing a few flowers to fall
at random onto the ground. The Tea Master Joo admitted Rikyu
to his school."
Personally:
Now the question might arise "how exactly I incorporate
Wabi-Sabi into my work"?
Maybe in a way Wabi-Sabi aesthetics are my roots. I, as a personal attitude,
come from Buddhism, and Wabi-Sabi is a Buddhism-related art theory. When
I studied in New York (1993 - 1995) some of my work executed then were
quite Wabi-Sabi. Now, years into painting, I came back to my true inner
voice: colorful, dynamic, energetic.
To be whole one must know both sides: the fearless never can be courageous,
because courage means to overcome fear (thus if you are not afraid, you
can never be very courageous). Knowing the subtleness of Wabi-Sabi consequently
is the root for my energetic paintings, I now know both sides.
Links:
http://www.tjnelson.com/wabisabi.htm
http://resurgence.gn.apc.org/issues/koren203.htm
Sources:
(1) The Voyage of the Dawn Treader The Chronicles
of Narnia, by C.S. Lewis http://innerspace-unltd.net/leap/dawn/narniaw8.html
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