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Teas As Religion And A
Symbol of Wealth
The Evolution of Tea
Tea In Southern China
The Tea Room
Art Appreciation
Flowers As a Symbol
Tea Masters
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The Tea Room - Tea In Europe
To
European architects brought up on the traditions of
stone and brick construction, our Japanese method of
building with wood and bamboo seems scarcely worthy to
be ranked as architecture. It is but quite recently that
a competent student of Western architecture has
recognized and paid tribute to the remarkable perfection
of our great temples.1
Such being the case as regards our classic architecture,
we could hardly expect the outsider to appreciate the
subtle beauty of the tea-room, its principles of
construction and decoration being entirely different
from those of the West.
The tea-room (the Sukiya) does not pretend to be
other than a mere cottage – a straw hut, as we call it.
The original ideographs for Sukiya mean the Abode of
Fancy. Latterly the various tea-masters substituted
various Chinese characters according to their conception
of the tea-room, and the term Sukiya may signify the
Abode of Vacancy or the Abode of the Unsymmetrical. It
is an Abode of Fancy inasmuch as it is an ephemeral
structure built to house a poetic impulse. It is an
Abode of Vacancy inasmuch as it is devoid of
ornamentation except for what may be placed in it to
satisfy some aesthetic need of the moment. It is an
Abode of the Unsymmetrical inasmuch as it is consecrated
to the worship of the Imperfect, purposely leaving some
thing unfinished for the play of the imagination to
complete. The ideals of Teaism have since the sixteenth
century influenced our architecture to such degree that
the ordinary Japanese interior of the present day, on
account of the extreme simplicity and chasteness of its
scheme of decoration, appears to foreigners almost
barren.
The first independent tea-room was the creation of
Senno-Soyeki, commonly known by his later name of Rikiu,
the greatest of all tea-masters, who, in the sixteenth
century, under the patronage of Taiko-Hideyoshi,
instituted and brought to a high state of perfection the
formalities of the Tea-ceremony. The proportions of the
tearoom had been previously determined by Jowo – a
famous tea-master of the fifteenth century. The early
tea-room consisted merely of a portion of the ordinary
drawing-room partitioned off by screens for the purpose
of the tea-gathering. The portion partitioned off was
called the Kakoi (enclosure), a name still applied to
those tea-rooms which are built into a house and are net
independent constructions. The Sukiya consists of the
tea-room proper, designed to accommodate not more than
five persons, a number suggestive of the saying "more
than the Graces and less than the Muses," an anteroom (midsuya)
where the tea utensils are washed and arranged before
being brought in, a portico (roachiai) in which the
guests wait until they receive the summons to enter the
tea-room, and a garden path (the roji) which connects
the machiai with the tea-room. The tea-room is
unimpressive in appearance. It is smaller than the
smallest of Japanese houses, while the materials used in
its construction are intended to give the suggestion of
refined poverty. Yet we must remember that all this is
the result of profound artistic forethought, and that
the details have been worked out with care perhaps even
greater than that expended on the building of the
richest palaces and temples. A good tea-room is more
costly than an ordinary mansion, for the selection of
its materials, as well as its workmanship, requires
immense care and precision. Indeed, the carpenters
employed by the tea-masters form a distinct and highly
honoured class among artisans, their work being no less
delicate than that of the makers of lacquer cabinets.
The tea-room is not only different from any
production of Western architecture, but also contrasts
strongly with the classical architecture of Japan
itself. Our ancient noble edifices, whether secular or
ecclesiastical, were not to be despised even as regards
their mere size. The few that have been spared in the
disastrous conflagrations of centuries are still capable
of aweing us by the grandeur and richness of their
decoration. Huge pillars of wood from two to three feet
in diameter and from thirty to forty feet high,
supported, by a complicated network of brackets, the
enormous beams which groaned under the weight of the
tile-covered slanting roofs. The material and mode of
construction, though weak against fire, proved itself
strong against earthquakes, and was well suited to the
climatic conditions of the country. In the Golden Hall
of Horiuji and the Pagoda of Yakushiji, we have
noteworthy examples of the durability of our wooden
architecture. These buildings have practically stood
intact for nearly twelve centuries. The interior of the
old temples and palaces was profusely decorated. In the
Hoodo temple at Uji, dating from the tenth century, we
can still see the elaborate canopy and gilded
baldachinos, many-coloured and inlaid with mirrors and
mother-of-pearl, as well as remains of the paintings and
sculpture which formerly covered the walls. Later, at
Nikko and in the Nijo castle in Kyoto, we see structural
beauty sacrificed to a wealth of ornamentation which in
colour and exquisite detail equals the utmost
gorgeousness of Arabian or Moorish effort.
The simplicity and purism of the tea-room resulted
from emulation of the Zen monastery. A Zen monastery
differs from those of other Buddhist sects inasmuch as
it is meant only to be a dwelling place for the monks.
Its chapel is not a place of worship or pilgrimage, but
a college room where the students congregate for
discussion and the practice of meditation. The room is
bare except for a central alcove in which, behind the
altar, is a statue of Bodhi Dharma, the founder of the
sect, or of Sakyamuni attended by Kaphiapa and Ananda,
the two earliest Zen patriarchs. On the altar, flowers
and incense are offered up in memory of the great
contributions which these sages made to Zen. We have
already said that it was the ritual instituted by the
Zen monks of successively drinking tea out of a bowl
before the image of Bodhi Dharma, which laid the
foundations of the tea-ceremony. We might add here that
the altar of the Zen chapel was the prototype of the
Tokonoma, – the place of honour in a Japanese room where
paintings and flowers are placed for the edification of
the guests.
All our great tea-masters were students of Zen and
attempted to introduce the spirit of Zennism into the
actualities of life. Thus the room, like the other
equipments of the tea-ceremony, reflects many of the Zen
doctrines. The size of the orthodox tea-room, which is
four mats and a half, or ten feet square, is determined
by a passage in the Sutra of Vikramadytia. In that
interesting work, Vikramadytia welcomes the Saint
Manjushiri and eighty-four thousand disciples of Buddha
in a room of this size, – an allegory based on the
theory of the non-existence of space to the truly
enlightened. Again the roji, the garden path which leads
from the roachiai to the tea-room, signified the first
stage of meditation, – the passage into
self-illumination. The roji was intended to break
connection with the outside world, and to produce a
fresh sensation conducive to the full enjoyment of
aestheticism in the tea-room itself. One who has trodden
this garden path cannot fail to remember how his spirit,
as he walked in the twilight of evergreens over the
regular irregularities of the stepping stones, beneath
which lay dried pine needles, and passed beside the
moss-covered granite lanterns, became uplifted above
ordinary thoughts. One may be in the midst of a city,
and yet feel as if he were in the forest far away from
the dust and din of civilisation. Great was the
ingenuity displayed by the tea-masters in producing
these effects of serenity and purity. The nature of the
sensations to be aroused in passing through the roji
differed with different tea-masters. Some, like Rikiu,
aimed at utter loneliness, and claimed the seeret of
making a roji was contained in the ancient ditty:
|
"I look beyond;
Flowers are not,
Nor tinted leaves.
On the sea beach
A solitary cottage stands
In the waning light
Of an autumn eve." |
Others, like Kobori-Enshiu,
sought for a different effect. Enshiu said the idea of
the garden path was to be found in the following verses:
|
"A cluster of summer trees;
A bit of the sea,
A pale evening moon." |
It is not difficult to gather his meaning. He
wished to create the attitude of a newly awakened
soul still lingering amid shadowy dreams of the
past, yet bathing in the sweet unconsciousness of a
mellow spiritual light, and yearning for the freedom
that lay in the expanse beyond.
Thus prepared the guest will silently approach
the sanctuary, and, if a samurai, will leave his
sword on the rack beneath the eaves, the tea-room
being preëminently the house of peace. Then he will
bend low and creep into the room through a small
door not more than three feet in height. This
proceeding was incumbent on all guests, – high and
low alike, – and was intended to inculcate humility.
The order of precedence having been mutually agreed
upon while resting in the machiai, the guests one by
one will enter noiselessly and take their seats,
first making obeisance to the picture or flower
arrangement on the tokonoma. The host will not enter
the room until all the guests have seated themselves
and quiet reigns with nothing to break the silence
save the note of the boiling water in the iron
kettle. The kettle sings well, for pieces of iron
are so arranged in the bottom as to produce a
peculiar melody in which one may hear the echoes of
a cataract muffled by clouds, of a distant sea
breaking among the rocks, a rainstorm sweeping
through a bamboo forest, or of the soughing of pines
on some faraway hill.
Even in the daytime the light in the room is
subdued, for the low eaves of the slanting roof
admit but few of the sun's rays. Everything is sober
in tint from the ceiling to the floor; the guests
themselves have carefully chosen garments of
unobtrusive colours. The mellowness of age is over
all, everything suggestive of recent acquirement
being tabooed save only the one note of contrast
furnished by the bamboo dipper and the linen napkin,
both immaculately white and new. However faded the
tea-room and the tea-equipage may seem, everything
is absolutely clean. Not a particle of dust will be
found in the darkest corner, for if any exists the
host is not a tea-master. One of the first
requisites of a tea-master is the knowledge of how
to sweep, clean, and wash, for there is an art in
cleaning and dusting. A piece of antique metal work
must not be attacked with the unscrupulous zeal of
the Dutch housewife. Dripping water from a flower
vase need not be wiped away, for it may be
suggestive of dew and coolness.
In this connection there is a story of Rikiu
which well illustrates the ideas of cleanliness
entertained by the tea-masters. Rikiu was watching
his son Shoan as he swept and watered the garden
path. "Not clean enough," said Rikiu, when Shoan had
finished his task, and bade him try again. After a
weary hour the son turned to Rikiu: "Father, there
is nothing more to be done. The steps have been
washed for the third time, the stone lanterns and
the trees are well sprinkled with water, moss and
lichens are shining with a fresh verdure; not a
twig, not a leaf have I left on the ground." "Young
fool," chided the tea-master, "that is not the way a
garden path should be swept." Saying this, Rikiu
stepped into the garden, shook a tree and scattered
over the garden gold and crimson leaves, scraps of
the brocade of autumn! What Rikiu demanded was not
cleanliness alone, but the beautiful and the natural
also.
The name, Abode of Fancy, implies a structure
created to meet some individual artistic
requirement. The tea-room is made for the
tea-master, not the tea-master for the tea-room. It
is not intended for posterity and is therefore
ephemeral. The idea that everyone should have a
house of his own is based on an ancient custom of
the Japanese race, Shinto superstition ordaining
that every dwelling should be evacuated on the death
of its chief occupant. Perhaps there may have been
some unrealised sanitary reason for this practice.
Another early custom was that a newly, built house
should be provided for each couple that married. It
is on account of such customs that we find the
Imperial capitals so frequently removed from one
site to another in ancient days. The rebuilding,
every twenty years, of Ise Temple, the supreme
shrine of the Sun-Goddess, is an example of one of
these ancient rites which still obtain at the
present day. The observance of these customs was
only possible with some such form of construction as
that furnished by our system of wooden architecture,
easily pulled down, easily built up. A more lasting
style, employing brick and stone, would have
rendered migrations impracticable, as indeed they
became when the more stable and massive wooden
construction of China was adopted by us after the
Nara period.
With the predominance of Zen individualism in
the fifteenth century, however, the old idea became
imbued with a deeper significance as conceived in
connection with the tea-room. Zennism, with the
Buddhist theory of evanescence and its demands for
the mastery of spirit over matter, recognised the
house only as a temporary refuge for the body. The
body itself was but as a hut in the wilderness, a
flimsy shelter made by tying together the grasses
that grew around, – when these ceased to be bound
together they again became resolved into the
original waste. In the tea-room fugitiveness is
suggested in the thatched roof, frailty in the
slender pillars, lightness in the bamboo support,
apparent carelessness in the use of commonplace
materials. The eternal is to be found only in the
spirit which, embodied in these simple surroundings,
beautifies them with the subtle light of its
refinement.
That the tea-room should be built to suit some
individual taste is an enforcement of the principle
of vitality in art. Art, to be fully appreciated,
must be true to contemporaneous life. It is not that
we should ignore the claims of posterity, but that
we should seek to enjoy the present more. It is not
that we should disregard the creations of the past,
but that we should try to assimilate them into our
consciousness. Slavish conformity to traditions and
formulas fetters the expression of individuality in
architecture. We can but weep over those senseless
imitations of European buildings which one beholds
in modern Japan. We marvel why, among the most
progressive Western nations, architecture should be
so devoid of originality, so replete with
repetitions of obsolete styles. Perhaps we are now
passing through an age of democratisation in art,
while awaiting the rise of some princely master who
shall establish a new dynasty. Would that we loved
the ancients more and copied them less! It has been
said that the Greeks were great because they never
drew from the antique.
The term, Abode of Vacancy, besides conveying
the Taoist theory of the all-containing, involves
the conception of a continued need of change in
decorative motives. The tea-room is absolutely
empty, except for what may be placed there
temporarily to satisfy some aesthetic mood. Some
special art object is brought in for the occasion,
and everything else is selected and arranged to
enhance the beauty of the principal theme. One
cannot listen to different pieces of music at the
same time, a real comprehension of the beautiful
being possible only through concentration upon some
central motive. Thus it will be seen that the system
of decoration in our tea-rooms is opposed to that
which obtains in the West, where the interior of a
house is often converted into a museum. To a
Japanese, accustomed to simplicity of ornamentation
and frequent change of decorative method, a Western
interior permanently filled with a vast array of
pictures, statuary, and bric-a-brac gives the
impression of mere vulgar display of riches. It
calls for a mighty wealth of appreciation to enjoy
the constant sight of even a masterpiece, and
limitless indeed must be the capacity for artistic
feeling in those who can exist day after day in the
midst of such confusion of colour and form as is to
be often seen in the homes of Europe and America.
The "Abode of the Unsymmetrical" suggests
another phase of our decorative scheme. The absence
of symmetry in Japanese art objects has been often
commented on by Western critics. This, also, is a
result of a working out through Zennism of Taoist
ideals. Confucianism, with its deep-seated idea of
dualism, and Northern Buddhism with its worship of a
trinity, were in no way opposed to the expression of
symmetry. As a matter of fact, if we study the
ancient bronzes of China or the religious arts of
the Tang dynasty and the Nara period, we shall
recognise a constant striving after symmetry. The
decoration of our classical interiors was decidedly
regular in its arrangement. The Taoist and Zen
conception of perfection, however, was different.
The dynamic nature of their philosophy laid more
stress upon the process through which perfection was
sought than upon perfection itself. True beauty
could be discovered only by one who mentally
completed the incomplete. The virility of life and
art lay in its possibilities for growth. In the
tea-room it is left for each guest in imagination to
complete the total effect in relation to himself.
Since Zennism has become the prevailing mode of
thought, the art of the extreme Orient has purposely
avoided the symmetrical as expressing not only
completion, but repetition. Uniformity of design was
considered as fatal to the freshness of imagination.
Thus, landscapes, birds, and flowers became the
favourite subjects for depiction rather than the
human figure, the latter being present in the person
of the beholder himself. We are often too much in
evidence as it is, and in spite of our vanity even
self-regard is apt to become monotonous.
In the tea-room the fear of repetition is a
constant presence. The various objects for the
decoration of a room should be so selected that no
colour or design shall he repeated. If you have a
living flower, a painting of flowers is not
allowable. If you are using a round kettle, the
water pitcher should be angular. A cup with a black
glaze should not be associated with a tea-caddy of
black lacquer. In placing a vase or an incense
burner on the tokonoma, care should he taken not to
put it in the exact centre, lest it divide the space
into equal halves. The pillar of the tokonoma should
be of a different kind of wood from the other
pillars, in order to break any suggestion of
monotony in the room.
Here again the Japanese method of interior
decoration differs from that of the Occident, where
we see objects arrayed symmetrically on mantelpieces
and elsewhere. In Western houses we are often
confronted with what appears to us useless
reiteration. We find it trying to talk to a man
while his full-length portrait stares at us from
behind his back. We wonder which is real, he of the
picture or he who talks, and feel a curious
conviction that one of them must be fraud. Many a
time have we sat at a festive board contemplating,
with a secret shock to our digestion, the
representation of abundance on the dining-room
walls. Why these pictured victims of chase and
sport, the elaborate carvings of fishes and fruit?
Why the display of family plates, reminding us of
those who have dined and are dead?
The simplicity of the tea-room and its freedom
from vulgarity make it truly a sanctuary from the
vexations of the outer world. There and there alone
can one consecrate himself to undisturbed adoration
of the beautiful. In the sixteenth century the
tea-room afforded a welcome respite from labour to
the fierce warriors and statesmen engaged in the
unification and reconstruction of Japan. In the
seventeenth century, after the strict formalism of
the Tokugawa rule had been developed, it offered
the only opportunity possible for the free communion
of artistic spirits. Before a great work of art
there was no distinction between daimyo, samurai,
and commoner. Nowadays industrialism is making true
refinement more and more difficult all the world
over. Do we not need the tea-room more than ever?
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